NASA'S Swift Survey Finds 'Smoking Gun' Of Black Hole Activation

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May 26, 2010

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Lynn Chandler 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-2806 
lynn.chandler-1@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-119

NASA'S SWIFT SURVEY FINDS 'SMOKING GUN' OF BLACK HOLE ACTIVATION

WASHINGTON -- Data from an ongoing survey by NASA's Swift satellite 
have helped astronomers solve a decades-long mystery about why a 
small percentage of black holes emit vast amounts of energy. 

Only about one percent of supermassive black holes exhibit this 
behavior. The new findings confirm that black holes "light up" when 
galaxies collide, and the data may offer insight into the future 
behavior of the black hole in our own Milky Way galaxy. The study 
will appear in the June 20 issue of The Astrophysical Journal 
Letters. 

The intense emission from galaxy centers, or nuclei, arises near a 
supermassive black hole containing between a million and a billion 
times the sun's mass. Giving off as much as 10 billion times the 
sun's energy, some of these active galactic nuclei (AGN) are the most 
luminous objects in the universe. They include quasars and blazars. 

"Theorists have shown that the violence in galaxy mergers can feed a 
galaxy's central black hole," said Michael Koss, the study's lead 
author and a graduate student at the University of Maryland in 
College Park. "The study elegantly explains how the black holes 
switched on." 

Until Swift's hard X-ray survey, astronomers never could be sure they 
had counted the majority of the AGN. Thick clouds of dust and gas 
surround the black hole in an active galaxy, which can block 
ultraviolet, optical and low-energy, or soft X-ray, light. Infrared 
radiation from warm dust near the black hole can pass through the 
material, but it can be confused with emissions from the galaxy's 
star-forming regions. Hard X-rays can help scientists directly detect 
the energetic black hole. Since 2004, the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) 
aboard Swift has been mapping the sky using hard X-rays. 

"Building up its exposure year after year, the Swift BAT Hard X-ray 
Survey is the largest, most sensitive and complete census of the sky 
at these energies," said Neil Gehrels, Swift's principal investigator 
at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. 

The survey, which is sensitive to AGN as far as 650 million 
light-years away, uncovered dozens of previously unrecognized 
systems. 

"The Swift BAT survey is giving us a very different picture of AGN," 
Koss said. The team finds that about a quarter of the BAT galaxies 
are in mergers or close pairs. "Perhaps 60 percent of these galaxies 
will completely merge in the next billion years. We think we have the 
'smoking gun' for merger-triggered AGN that theorists have 
predicted." 

Swift, launched in November 2004, is managed by Goddard. It was built 
and is being operated in collaboration with Penn State, the Los 
Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, and General Dynamics in 
Falls Church, Va.; the University of Leicester and Mullard Space 
Sciences Laboratory in the United Kingdom; Brera Observatory and the 
Italian Space Agency in Italy; plus additional partners in Germany 
and Japan. 

Other members of the study team include Richard Mushotzky and Sylvain 
Veilleux at the University of Maryland and Lisa Winter at the Center 
for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy at the University of Colorado in 
Boulder. 

For more information, images and animations, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/swift   

	
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