Black Hole Growth Found To Be Out Of Sync

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June 11, 2012

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

Megan Watzke 
Chandra X-ray Center, Cambridge, Mass. 
617-496-7998 
mwatzke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 12-191

BLACK HOLE GROWTH FOUND TO BE OUT OF SYNC

WASHINGTON -- New evidence from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory 
challenges prevailing ideas about how black holes grow in the centers 
of galaxies. Astronomers long have thought that a supermassive black 
hole and the bulge of stars at the center of its host galaxy grow at 
the same rate -- the bigger the bulge, the bigger the black hole. 
However, a new study of Chandra data has revealed two nearby galaxies 
with supermassive black holes that are growing faster than the 
galaxies themselves. 

The mass of a giant black hole at the center of a galaxy typically is 
a tiny fraction -- about 0.2 percent -- of the mass contained in the 
bulge, or region of densely packed stars, surrounding it. The targets 
of the latest Chandra study, galaxies NGC 4342 and NGC 4291, have 
black holes 10 times to 35 times more massive than they should be 
compared to their bulges. The new observations with Chandra show the 
halos, or massive envelopes of dark matter in which these galaxies 
reside, also are overweight. 

This study suggests the two supermassive black holes and their 
evolution are tied to their dark matter halos and did not grow in 
tandem with the galactic bulges. In this view, the black holes and 
dark matter halos are not overweight, but the total mass in the 
galaxies is too low. 

"This gives us more evidence of a link between two of the most 
mysterious and darkest phenomena in astrophysics -- black holes and 
dark matter -- in these galaxies," said Akos Bogdan of the 
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, 
Mass., who led the new study. 

NGC 4342 and NGC 4291 are close to Earth in cosmic terms, at distances 
of 75 million and 85 million light years. Astronomers had known from 
previous observations that these galaxies host black holes with 
relatively large masses, but are not certain what is responsible for 
the disparity. Based on the new Chandra observations, however, they 
are able to rule out a phenomenon known as tidal stripping. 

Tidal stripping occurs when some of a galaxy's stars are stripped away 
by gravity during a close encounter with another galaxy. If such 
tidal stripping had taken place, the halos mostly would have been 
missing. Because dark matter extends farther away from the galaxies, 
it is more loosely tied to them than the stars and more likely to be 
pulled away. 

To rule out tidal stripping, astronomers used Chandra to look for 
evidence of hot, X-ray-emitting gas around the two galaxies. Because 
the pressure of hot gas -- estimated from X-ray images -- balances 
the gravitational pull of all the matter in the galaxy, the new 
Chandra data can provide information about the dark matter halos. The 
hot gas was found to be distributed widely around NGC 4342 and NGC 
4291, implying that each galaxy has an unusually massive dark matter 
halo and that tidal stripping is unlikely. 

"This is the clearest evidence we have, in the nearby universe, for 
black holes growing faster than their host galaxy," said co-author 
Bill Forman, also of CfA. "It's not that the galaxies have been 
compromised by close encounters, but instead they had some sort of 
arrested development." 

How can the mass of a black hole grow faster than the stellar mass of 
its host galaxy? The study's authors suggest a large concentration of 
gas spinning slowly in the galactic center is what the black hole 
consumes very early in its history. It grows quickly, and as it 
grows, the amount of gas it can accrete, or swallow, increases along 
with the energy output from the accretion. After the black hole 
reaches a critical mass, outbursts powered by the continued 
consumption of gas prevent cooling and limit the production of new 
stars. 

"It's possible that the supermassive black hole reached a hefty size 
before there were many stars at all in the galaxy," said Bogdan. 
"That is a significant change in our way of thinking about how 
galaxies and black holes evolve together." 

The results were presented June 11 at the 220th meeting of the 
American Astronomical Society in Anchorage, Alaska. The study also 
has been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the 
Chandra program for the agency's NASA's Science Mission Directorate 
in Washington. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in 
Cambridge, Mass., controls Chandra's science and flight operations. 

For an additional interactive image, podcast and video on the new 
finding, visit: 

http://chandra.si.edu 

For Chandra images, multimedia and related materials, visit: 
http://www.nasa.gov/chandra 

	
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