| NASA's Chandra Finds Milky Way's Black Hole Grazing on Asteroids |
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09/02/2012 03:50 (105 Day 21:55 minutes ago) | |||||
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The FINANCIAL -- The giant black hole at the center of the Milky Way may be vaporizing and devouring asteroids, which could explain the frequent flares observed, according to astronomers using data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.
According to NASA, for several years Chandra has detected X-ray flares about once a day from the supermassive black hole known as Sagittarius A, or "Sgr A" for short. The flares last a few hours with brightness ranging from a few times to nearly one hundred times that of the black hole's regular output. The flares also have been seen in infrared data from ESO's Very Large Telescope in Chile.
Zubovas and his colleagues suggest there is a cloud around Sgr A containing trillions of asteroids and comets, stripped from their parent stars. Asteroids passing within about 100 million miles of the black hole, roughly the distance between the Earth and the sun, would be torn into pieces by the tidal forces from the black hole.
The authors estimate that it would take asteroids larger than about six miles in radius to generate the flares observed by Chandra. Meanwhile, Sgr A also may be consuming smaller asteroids, but these would be difficult to spot because the flares they generate would be fainter.
Planets thrown into orbits too close to Sgr A also should be disrupted by tidal forces, although this would happen much less frequently than the disruption of asteroids, because planets are not as common. Such a scenario may have been responsible for a previous X-ray brightening of Sgr A by about a factor of a million about a century ago. While this event happened many decades before X-ray telescopes existed, Chandra and other X-ray missions have seen evidence of an X-ray "light echo" reflecting off nearby clouds, providing a measure of the brightness and timing of the flare.
Very long observations of Sgr A will be made with Chandra later in 2012 that will give valuable new information about the frequency and brightness of flares and should help to test the model proposed here to explain them. This work could improve understanding about the formation of asteroids and planets in the harsh environment of Sgr A.
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