V404 Cygni Black hole, International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research
V404 Cygni Black hole, International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research

NEWS BRIEFING: Astronomers catch swirling jets from black hole during 'feeding frenzy'

Embargoed until: Publicly released:

Astronomers in Australia and overseas have caught a black hole in the act of "feeding" on a nearby companion star, resulting in the ejection of dramatic off-kilter jets. The black hole, known as V404 Cygni, is nearly 8000 light years from Earth and about nine times the mass of our Sun. The hole appears to be spinning at a different angle to the disk of material surrounding it, causing the inner part of the disk to wobble like a spinning top. This redirects the jets so that they move away at a range of different angles, spreading their energy over a wide area. Black hole jets pump vast amounts of energy back into the surrounding Universe, and this research shows us that these powerful beams of plasma can actually be redirected when a spinning black hole drags spacetime - the very fabric of our Universe - around with it. **Briefing recording now available**

Journal/conference: Nature

Link to research (DOI): 10.1038/s41586-019-1152-0

Organisation/s: International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), Curtin University

Funder: ARC Future Fellowship and assorted international funding agencies

Media Briefing/Press Conference

From: International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR)

Speakers:

Associate Professor James Miller-Jones  is a radio astronomer with ICRAR, the International Centre for Radio Astronomy, and Science Director at the Curtin Institute for Radio Astronomy at Curtin University.

This briefing has now finished.
You can find a link to the full recording of the briefing below.

Media Release

Spinning black hole sprays light-speed plasma clouds into space

Astronomers have discovered rapidly swinging jets coming from a black hole almost 8000 light-years from Earth.

Published today in the journal Nature, the research shows jets from V404 Cygni’s black hole behaving in a way never seen before on such short timescales.

The jets appear to be rapidly rotating with high-speed clouds of plasma—potentially just minutes apart—shooting out of the black hole in different directions.

Lead author Associate Professor James Miller-Jones, from the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), said black holes are some of the most extreme objects in the Universe.

“This is one of the most extraordinary black hole systems I’ve ever come across,” Associate Professor Miller-Jones said.

“Like many black holes, it’s feeding on a nearby star, pulling gas away from the star and forming a disk of material that encircles the black hole and spirals towards it under gravity.

“What’s different in V404 Cygni is that we think the disk of material and the black hole are misaligned.

“This appears to be causing the inner part of the disk to wobble like a spinning top and fire jets out in different directions as it changes orientation.”

V404 Cygni was first identified as a black hole in 1989 when it released a big outburst of jets and radiation.

Astronomers looking at archival photographic plates then found previous outbursts in observations from 1938 and 1956.

Associate Professor Miller-Jones said that when V404 Cygni experienced another very bright outburst in 2015, lasting for two weeks, telescopes around the world tuned in to study what was going on.

“Everybody jumped on the outburst with whatever telescopes they could throw at it,” he said.

“So we have this amazing observational coverage.”

When Associate Professor Miller-Jones and his team studied the black hole, they saw its jets behaving in a way never seen before.

Where jets are usually thought to shoot straight out from the poles of black holes, these jets were shooting out in different directions at different times.

And they were changing direction very quickly—over no more than a couple of hours.

Associate Professor Miller-Jones said the change in the movement of the jets was because of the accretion disk—the rotating disk of matter around a black hole.

He said V404 Cygni’s accretion disk is 10 million kilometres wide, and the inner few thousand kilometres was puffed up and wobbling during the bright outburst.

“The inner part of the accretion disk was precessing and effectively pulling the jets around with it,” Associate Professor Miller-Jones said.

“You can think of it like the wobble of a spinning top as it slows down—only in this case, the wobble is caused by Einstein’s theory of general relativity.”

The research used observations from the Very Long Baseline Array, a continent-sized radio telescope made up of 10 dishes across the United States, from the Virgin Islands in the Caribbean to Hawaii.

Co-author Alex Tetarenko—a recent PhD graduate from the University of Alberta and currently an East Asian Observatory Fellow working in Hawaii—said the speed the jets were changing direction meant the scientists had to use a very different approach to most radio observations.

“Typically, radio telescopes produce a single image from several hours of observation,” she said.

“But these jets were changing so fast that in a four-hour image we just saw a blur.

“It was like trying to take a picture of a waterfall with a one-second shutter speed.”

Instead, the researchers produced 103 individual images, each about 70 seconds long, and joined them together into a movie.

“It was only by doing this that we were able to see these changes over a very short time period,” Dr Tetarenko said.

Study co-author Dr Gemma Anderson, who is also based at ICRAR’s Curtin University node, said the wobble of the inner accretion disk could happen in other extreme events in the Universe too.

“Anytime you get a misalignment between the spin of a black hole and the material falling in, you would expect to see this when a black hole starts feeding very rapidly,” Dr Anderson said.

“That could include a whole bunch of other bright, explosive events in the Universe, such as supermassive black holes feeding very quickly or tidal disruption events, when a black hole shreds a star.”

Original Publication:

‘A rapidly-changing jet orientation in the stellar-mass black hole V404 Cygni’, published in Nature on April 29th, 2019.

Multimedia:

High-resolution images, an animation and a simulation are available from www.icrar.org/Cygni

(the password during the embargo period is “spacetime”)

Attachments:

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public

  • International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR)
    Web page
    Images and video available - password: spacetime
  • Australian Science Media Centre
    Web page
    Full briefing recording

News for:

Australia
WA

Multimedia:

  •  Artist’s impression of the changing jet orientation in V404 Cygni
    Artist’s impression of the changing jet orientation in V404 Cygni

    Schematic artist’s impression of the changing jet orientation in V404 Cygni. Each segment (as separated by the clock hands) shows the jets at a different time, oriented in different directions as seen in our high angular resolution radio imaging.

    File size: 4.6 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of the black hole X-ray binary system V404 Cygni
    Artist’s impression of the black hole X-ray binary system V404 Cygni

    Artist’s impression of the black hole X-ray binary system V404 Cygni as seen from a distance. Bright spots in the jets are detected by our high angular resolution radio imaging, and move away from the black hole in different directions. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 2.5 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of the V404 Cygni black hole X-ray binary system
    Artist’s impression of the V404 Cygni black hole X-ray binary system

    Artist’s impression of the V404 Cygni black hole X-ray binary system. The jets launched from the inner part of the system move in different directions at different times, generating a corkscrew-shaped pattern as they swing around. We do not have the resolution to be able to make out this structure, and see only the brightest clouds of plasma as they move outwards. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 2.3 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of V404 Cygni seen close up.
    Artist’s impression of V404 Cygni seen close up.

    Artist’s impression of V404 Cygni seen close up. The binary star system consists of a normal star in orbit with a black hole. Material from the star falls towards the black hole and spirals inwards in an accretion disk, with powerful jets being launched from the inner regions close to the black hole. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 6.3 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of the accretion disk around the black hole.
    Artist’s impression of the accretion disk around the black hole.

    Artist’s impression of the accretion disk around the black hole. During a powerful outburst in 2015, intense radiation caused the inner few thousand kilometres of the accretion disk to “puff up” into a doughnut-shaped structure. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 8.0 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of jet ejections in V404 Cygni.
    Artist’s impression of jet ejections in V404 Cygni.

    Artist’s impression of jet ejections in V404 Cygni. With our radio telescopes, we see individual bright clouds of plasma that have been ejected from the innermost regions, and redirected by the puffed-up inner accretion disk.

    File size: 8.4 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression showing a cross section of the accretion disk in V404 Cygni.
    Artist’s impression showing a cross section of the accretion disk in V404 Cygni.

    Artist’s impression showing a cross section of the accretion disk in V404 Cygni. The precessing, puffed-up region of the disk is only a few thousand kilometres wide, as compared to a total disk size of about 10 million kilometres. The disk is hottest in its inner regions, and becomes cooler and thicker further out. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 8.5 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • Artist’s impression of twisted space-time around the spinning black hole
    Artist’s impression of twisted space-time around the spinning black hole

    Artist’s impression of twisted space-time around the spinning black hole. The black hole is so dense that it creates a rupture in the very fabric of space time, seen here as the infinitely deep well in the centre. As the black hole spins, it drags spacetime around with it, giving rise to the twisting of the spacetime grid shown here. This leads to the precession of the inner puffed-up accretion disk. Credit: ICRAR

    File size: 8.2 MB

    Attribution: ICRAR

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 19 May 2021 1:28pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

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