Blinded by the light! How do black holes produce light?

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International
Pablo Garcia (NASA/MSFC)
Pablo Garcia (NASA/MSFC)

How do black holes produce light? International researchers have been observing galaxies known as blazars, which are powered by supermassive black holes and fire powerful jets of ionized particles in the direction of earth, and believe they have discovered how these blazars produce light. Using the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE), the team was able to observe X-rays being emitted from the blazar known as Markarian 501, and believe that the particles are being supercharged by a magnetic 'shock wave' produced by the black hole, accelerating the particles to the point that they produce X-rays. As these particles get further away from the source of the shock wave, turbulence causes them to emit lower-energy light: first visible, then infrared, and radio waves. 

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Astrophysics: How black holes produce bright light (N&V) *IMAGES* 

Observations of brightly shining jets of particles from galaxies powered by supermassive black holes, published in Nature this week, shed light on the processes that underlie such phenomena. The findings may help us to understand more about high-energy emission processes from black-hole systems.

Blazars are a type of galaxy from which powerful jets of ionized matter are released pointing in the direction of Earth. Most of the light from blazars is produced by high-energy particles. How these particles are accelerated to such high energies remains an unanswered question. X-ray measurements of the jets offer the possibility to answer this question, but an instrument capable of making such measurements has not been available until recently.

Launched in December 2021, the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) has measured the X-ray polarization of a very bright blazar known as Markarian 501 (Mrk 501). Ioannis Liodakis and colleagues consider two X-ray polarimetry observations of Mrk 501 made by IXPE in March 2022. By comparing these measurements with radio and optical polarimetric data, the authors propose that the initial acceleration of particles in the jets from this blazar was caused by a shock wave that propagated out along the jet. These results demonstrate how using different measurements of polarization can probe the condition in supermassive black-hole systems.

In an accompanying News & Views, Lea Marcotulli describes these results as a turning point in our understanding of blazars. “X-ray polarimetry will now enable us to study several of these jets to understand if these shocks are common to all sources”, they add.

Multimedia

Observing blazar Markarian 501
Observing blazar Markarian 501
Observing blazar Markarian 501 - with annotation
Observing blazar Markarian 501 - with annotation
Journal/
conference:
Nature
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Turku, Finland
Funder: See paper for full funding
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