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Galaxy starves its supermassive black hole, loses 95% of its brightness

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CitrixNews Staff
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Galaxy starves its supermassive black hole, loses 95% of its brightness
Click for next article On the left, an illustration of a bright object in space. On the right, the same object looks significantly dimmer. (Left) A distant supermassive black hole during its bright feeding phase (Right). The same black hole after its food supply is cut off, and it has dimmed. (Image credit: Chiba Institute of Technology) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Get the Space.com Newsletter

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Astronomers watched a distant galaxy cut off the "food," or general matter, flowing to its central supermassive black hole. As the regions around feeding black holes are often brighter than the combined light of every star in their host galaxy, this led to a radical change in brightness occurring over just 20 years. The starvation of this central black hole was marked by the galaxy dimming by 95%, dropping to 5% of its original brightness.

The discovery is remarkable because it demonstrates that the activity of supermassive black holes can radically change over timespans similar in scale to a human lifetime — rather than over thousands of years as current models suggest. As the first evidence of this rapid "starvation" the discovery could prompt a change in current black hole feeding models that suggest such changes take much longer to proceed.

When supermassive black holes are surrounded by a wealth of gas and dust, their immense gravitational influence causes this disk-shaped structure, called an accretion disk, to glow brightly. This cosmic larder region with a feeding black hole at its heart is called an active galactic nucleus (AGN), and can get so bright it outshines the combined light of every star in the surrounding host galaxy. When the flow of gas to the accretion disk is slowed, and the black hole's larder is not restocked, the AGN's brightness lowers. That is exactly what seems to be happening in this galaxy.

"It is fascinating that an active galactic nucleus can change its brightness so dramatically over such a short period of time, and that this fading appears to be caused by a large change in the accretion rate onto the supermassive black hole," team leader Tomoki Morokuma of Chiba Institute of Technology said in a statement. "Using wide-field survey data, such as those from Hyper Suprime-Cam, we hope to discover more objects like this and learn how the activity of supermassive black holes shuts down and restarts."

Supermassive black hole is put on a strict diet

The international team of astronomers discovered that this black hole in the galaxy J0218−0036 was gradually being starved when they dived into two decades of archival astronomical data and compared images from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) with those from Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) on the Subaru Telescope.

This revealed a decline in brightness of 95% over 20 years. This is extreme compared to the usual variability of AGN brightness, which is around 30%. The team continued their investigation of the AGN using observations taken over 70 years, and by collecting new data from this AGN using the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), the Subaru Telescope and the W. M. Keck Observatory, as well as an array of radio telescopes. This allowed them to track changes in brightness over a range of wavelengths from X-rays to infrared radiation.

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On the left, a hazy blue dot. On the right, the same dot but more faded.

Visible-light images of the galaxy J0218−0036 (redshift 1.8; about 10 billion light-years away), indicated by the yellow arrows. The image on the left was taken by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), and the image on the right by Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) on the Subaru Telescope. Because HSC has higher sensitivity than SDSS, many additional faint objects are visible in the HSC image. Comparing the brightnesses in the two images shows that the galaxy faded dramatically between about 2002 (SDSS) and 2018 (HSC). (Image credit: SDSS, HSC-SSP/NAOJ)

Following this investigation, the team determined the rate at which gas was flowing from the accretion disk to this supermassive black hole had been cut by around 98% over the course of just seven years. That told the researchers the supply of matter to the accretion disk was rapidly decreasing.

The researchers confirmed this was a case of the food supply of this black hole being staunched, by ruling out the possibility that a cloud of gas had passed in front of the accretion disk, temporarily blocking its light. They determined that such blocking couldn't account for changes across all the different wavelengths of light they studied.

Though the cut in gas supply to this AGN and the end of replenishment of the accretion disk that is gradually feeding this supermassive black hole are certain, what the team can't be completely sure of is what is causing this cessation. Even with that mechanism shrouded in mystery, this research shows that changes in the mass accretion of supermassive black holes don't always take thousands of years, as previously thought.

"This object shows rapid variability that cannot be explained by standard models. It provides an important test case for developing new theoretical models," team member Toshihiro Kawaguchi of the University of Toyama said. "We will investigate what physical conditions could reproduce the observed behavior."

The team's research was published in the journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan (PASJ).

Robert LeaRobert LeaSenior Writer

Robert Lea is a science journalist in the U.K. whose articles have been published in Physics World, New Scientist, Astronomy Magazine, All About Space, Newsweek and ZME Science. He also writes about science communication for Elsevier and the European Journal of Physics. Rob holds a bachelor of science degree in physics and astronomy from the U.K.’s Open University. Follow him on Twitter @sciencef1rst.

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Originally reported by Space.com