(And of course you should listen to “Supermassive Black Hole” by Muse while enjoying this article. It’s the real only way. đ)
August 21, 2024 Evrim Yazgin
Astrophysicists at Melbourneâs Monash University have generated the first simulation which accurately depicts what happens when a star ventures too close to a supermassive black hole.
The research, published in Astrophysical Journal Letters, is a technical milestone in our attempts to understand these mysterious cosmic giants.
Video on the page, or here on YouTube.
First author Daniel Price, a professor at Monash, tells Cosmos that there are about 100 events which have been observed over the past decade-and-a-half which astronomers believe fit the bill to be a star being destroyed by a supermassive black hole, also called a tidal disruption event (TDE).
Not X-ray vision
But these observations have thrown up some odd measurements which havenât been explained until now.
âIf you dump a bunch of material close to black hole and form an accretion disk around that black hole, thereâs a prediction for where the material should land,â Price says. âThe material at that location should be more than a million degrees in temperature. It should generate X-rays.
âSo, if you have unobscured stuff feeding a black hole, you get X-ray emission. For example, the black hole sources in the galaxy, theyâre all X-ray emitters.â
Stars falling into supermassive black holes, however, do not result in emission of X-rays. They emit light in the visible, or optical, spectrum.
Current theories can only speculate why such events lead to material being flung toward us at 20,000km per second â about one-fifteenth the speed of light.
An eating analogy â but not in the way you think
Price explains that the simulation illuminates why it is optical light, not X-rays, which we observe when our telescopes pick up stars falling into supermassive black holes.
âThe analogy with me eating is that you donât see my stomach. Youâre not seeing the thing thatâs generating the energy, youâre seeing it reprocessed through my skin,â Price says. âIf you look at my light curve, you see that Iâm a constant temperature of 38°C all day.
âMy light curve is very much like a disruption event. The temperatures are pretty much constant. Luminosity changes a bit, but you infer thatâs because the size of the objects changing, but the temperature evolution is very flat. So, it looks like exactly like me, just a lot warmer and a lot bigger.â
In fact, this size of the photosphere â the object which emits the optical rays â itself is surprising, says Price.
The photosphere in the simulation, which matches observations, is about 100 astronomical units (AU), where 1 AU is the distance from the Earth to the Sun (roughly 150 million kilometres).
Video on the page, or here on YouTube
âNo one knows what it is,â Price laughs.
What we see is muffled
Price says the simulations confirm a theoretical explanation for these unexpected observations called the Eddington envelope.
âThatâs the concept that youâre stuffing material down towards the black hole faster than it can process it,â Price says. âBy process, I mean like the sun processes the energy from its core â it just kind of gently radiates it away. So the black hole canât radiate away the stuff that youâre trying to feed it. And, so, it has to literally blow it away.â
This material âsmothersâ the black hole, absorbing the X-rays that the black hole emits and re-emitting it as optical light.
Price extends the eating analogy to an unpleasant place.
âBasically, itâs like stuffing your stomach. Youâre going to vomit eventually. Thatâs pretty much what happens.â
The power of a simulation
âThatâs the exciting thing in simulations. People have speculated for a long time and drawn illustrations and this kind of thing, but thereâs no physics in that. Thatâs just what we call phenomenology. Thatâs how it must be to explain this phenomena. But we donât know what produces that kind of envelope or layer, or reprocessing layer,â Price says.
The simulation, Price says, just requires the initial conditions â the star â the fluid mechanics governing the star, and the rules of general relativity.
âThen itâs just a technical challenge,â he says.
âIn a lot of simulation work, youâre kind of guessing what might have happened,â he adds. âBut in this case, weâre pretty sure what happens. Itâs really nice to get that connection to the observations of transients from just chucking a star at a computer.â
Price explains that the simulation will set astrophysicists and astronomers up to be able to understand such phenomena much better as more observations are expected to be made soon.
âThe first optical transient was only detected in 2010, but whatâs coming is the Rubins observatory being built in Chile. Thatâs expected to boost the population of these things into the thousands.
âHaving a good theoretical understanding of what the kind of phenomena is sets us up really well for that future flood of observations. Itâs not just some theoretical speculation. Thereâs really something we can go after and understand by looking at it.â