PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How to build a middleweight black hole

New model for intermediate black hole formation parallels growth of giant planets

2012-07-20
(Press-News.org) A new model shows how an elusive type of black hole can be formed in the gas surrounding their supermassive counterparts. In research published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, scientists from the American Museum of Natural History, the City University of New York, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology, and the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics propose that intermediate-mass black holes—light-swallowing celestial objects with masses ranging from hundreds to many thousands of times the mass of the Sun—can grow in the gas disks around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies. The physical mechanism parallels the model astrophysicists use to describe the growth of giant planets in the gas disks surrounding stars.

"We know about small black holes, which tend to be close to us and have masses a few to 10 times that of our Sun, and we know about supermassive black holes, which are found in the centers of galaxies and have a mass that's millions to billions of times the mass of the sun," said coauthor Saavik Ford, who is a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics as well as a professor at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, City University of New York (CUNY) and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center. "But we have no evidence for the middle stage. Intermediate-mass black holes are much harder to find."

The birth of an intermediate black hole starts with the death of a star that forms a stellar or low-mass black hole. In order for this "seed" to grow, it must collide with and consume other dead and living stars. But even though there are many billions of stars in large galaxies, there's an even greater proportion of empty space, making collisions a very rare occurrence.

The researchers' new model suggests that previous searches for middleweight black holes might have been focused on the wrong birthing ground.

"The recent focus had been on star clusters, but objects there move very quickly and there's no gas, which makes the chances of a collision very slim," said Barry McKernan, a research associate in the Museum's Department of Astrophysics who is a professor at CUNY's Borough of Manhattan Community College and a faculty member at CUNY's Graduate Center.

The new mechanism turns attention instead to active galactic nuclei, the piping hot and ultra-bright cores of galaxies that feed supermassive black holes. The gas in this system is key, causing the stars to slow down and conform to a circularized orbit.

"You can think of the stars as cars traveling on a 10-lane highway," McKernan said. "If there were no gas, the cars would be going at very different speeds and mostly staying in their lanes, making the odds of collision low. When you add gas, it slows the cars to matching speeds but also moves them into other lanes, making the odds of collision and consumption much higher."

The resulting collisions allow a stellar black hole to swallow stars and grow. The black hole's size and gravitational pull increase as its mass expands, escalating its chance of further collisions. This phenomenon, called "runaway growth," can lead to the creation of an intermediate-mass black hole.

As they increase in size, the black holes start altering the gas disk that controls them. The researchers' model shows that black holes of a certain mass can create a gap in the gas disk, a signature that might give scientists the first glimpse of intermediate black holes.

The model describing this growth is a scaled-up version of the mechanism for the formation of gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn. Like intermediate black holes, these planets are thought to have grown in gas disks. The planets, though, developed in disks surrounding newly forming stars. Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, chair of the Department of Astrophysics at the Museum, has modeled that case.

"In some regions, we showed that rocky planets could be moved by the gas into common orbits, where they collide to form objects more than ten times the mass of the Earth, massive enough to attract gas and form gas giant planets," Mac Low said. "The creative work described here applies the same principles to the far more massive disks found at the centers of galaxies, to form black holes rather than giant planets."

INFORMATION:

Other authors on the paper include Museum research associate Wladimir Lyra from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology and Hagai Perets from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

This work was supported in part by NASA and CUNY.

Research paper: B. McKernan, K.E.S. Ford, W. Lyra, H.B. Perets, "Intermediate mass black holes in AGN disks - I. Production & Growth," Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. (2012). doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21486.x

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New research questions how fat influences flavor perception

2012-07-20
A joint study carried out by The University of Nottingham and the multinational food company Unilever has found for the first time that fat in food can reduce activity in several areas of the brain which are responsible for processing taste, aroma and reward. The research, now available in the Springer journal Chemosensory Perception, provides the food industry with better understanding of how in the future it might be able to make healthier, less fatty food products without negatively affecting their overall taste and enjoyment. Unveiled in 2010, Unilever's Sustainable ...

Of flies and men

2012-07-20
What do you get when you dissect 10 000 fruit-fly larvae? A team of researchers led by the EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI) in the UK and the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics (MPI) in Freiburg, Germany has discovered a way in which cells can adjust the activity of many different genes at once. Their findings, published in the journal Science, overturn commonly held views and reveal an important mechanism behind gender differences. Asifa Akhtar's laboratory, previously at EMBL now at MPI, studies precisely how flies regulate an important ...

NASA sees sun send out mid-level solar flare

2012-07-20
The sun emitted a mid-level solar flare on July 19, 2012, beginning at 1:13 AM EDT and peaking at 1:58 AM. Solar flares are gigantic bursts of radiation that cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere to harm humans on the ground, however, when strong enough, they can disrupt the atmosphere and degrade GPS and communications signals. The flare is classified as an M7.7 flare. This means it is weaker than the largest flares, which are classified as X-class. M-class flares can cause brief radio communications blackouts at the poles. Increased numbers of flares are currently ...

Herbal remedy used to treat hepatitis C proves ineffective, Penn study finds

2012-07-20
PHILADELPHIA - Silymarin, an extract of milk thistle commonly used to treat chronic liver disease by millions of people around the World, does not offer significant improvements for patients, according to a new study conducted by a nationwide group of researchers including faculty at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Milk thistle fruit extracts have been widely used by patients in treating liver disease based on previous evidence showing that it has anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, and potentially anti-viral properties. However, the new ...

Mild HIV type slows development of AIDS and makes new preventive treatments possible

2012-07-20
A new study from Lund University in Sweden has opened the way for new approaches to slowing the development of AIDS in HIV-1-infected patients. It is hoped that this could lead to better treatment methods and preventive measures to combat HIV and AIDS. The findings have just been published in the distinguished scientific journal New England Journal of Medicine. The most common type of the virus that causes AIDS – HIV-1 – is less aggressive when it infects a person already carrying the milder HIV-2. The study looked at how the disease developed in those who had been ...

Crossing the gap: Civil engineers develop improved method for detecting, measuring bridge damage

2012-07-20
MANHATTAN, KAN. -- A ratings system developed by a group of Kansas State University researchers could keep bridges safer and help prevent catastrophic collapses. Hayder Rasheed, associate professor of civil engineering, and Yacoub Najjar, professor of civil engineering, are collaborating to better detect and measure damage in concrete bridges. Ahmed Al-Rahmani, doctoral student in civil engineering, United Arab Emirates, has also been involved in the project. The researchers have created a bridge health index, which is a rating system that more accurately describes ...

Innovation promises to cut massive power use at big data companies in a flash

2012-07-20
Big data needs big power. The server farms that undergird the Internet run on a vast tide of electricity. Even companies that have invested in upgrades to minimize their eco-footprint use tremendous amounts: The New York Times estimates that Google, for example, uses enough electricity in its data centers to power about 200,000 homes. Now, a team of Princeton University engineers has a solution that could radically cut that power use. Through a new software technique, researchers from the School of Engineering and Applied Science have opened the door for companies to ...

Leopard in dramatic photo traced to 2004 camera trap

2012-07-20
NEW YORK (July 19, 2012)— A dramatic photo of a male leopard dragging a massive gaur (or Indian bison) calf in Karnataka's Bandipur Tiger Reserve turned out to be the same animal photographed by a WCS camera trap nearly eight years ago. The photo, taken by Indian photographer Vinay S. Kumar, was initially submitted to Conservation India, a not-for-profit portal to enable conservation action. Intrigued by the picture, CI's editors sent it to researchers at Wildlife Conservation Society's India Program who have been running a tiger-monitoring program for over two decades ...

A good night's sleep could keep you out of a nursing home

2012-07-20
Tired? Scientists have discovered another possible benefit of a night of restful and uninterrupted sleep. According to a new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health fragmented or interrupted sleep could predict future placement in a nursing home or assisted living facility. The study is featured in the July 2012 issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society and outlines the association between objectively measured sleep and subsequent institutionalization among older women. "Sleep disturbances are common in older people," ...

Study implements community-based approach to treat HIV-infection in rural Uganda

2012-07-20
(Edmonton, AB) New research from the University of Alberta's School of Public Health has demonstrated that community-based resources in rural Uganda can successfully provide HIV treatments to patients, where economic and geographical barriers would typically prevent access to care. Working with the Kabarole District Health Department and colleagues at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda, the researchers implemented a new model by which volunteers were trained to provide basic care to HIV patients in Rwimi sub-county. When comparing the viral loads of 185 patients ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

HKU Engineering Professor Kaibin Huang named Fellow of the US National Academy of Inventors

HKU Faculty of Arts Professor Charles Schencking elected as Corresponding Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities

Rise in post-birth blood pressure in Asian, Black, and Hispanic women linked to microaggressions

Weight changes and heart failure risk after breast cancer development

Changes in patient care experience after private equity acquisition of US hospitals

COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among Black women in the US

An earful of gill: USC Stem Cell study points to the evolutionary origin of the mammalian outer ear

A Sustainable Development Goal for space?

The Balbiani body: Cracking the secret of embryonic beginnings

Science behind genetic testing for identifying risk of opioid misuse remains unproven

Two-in-one root armor protects plants from environmental stressors and fights climate change

The extreme teeth of sabre-toothed predators were ‘optimal’ for biting into prey, new study reveals

Research spotlight: Factors contributing to treatment resistance in CAR T therapies for solid tumors

New findings could lead to better treatment for blood cancer

Expanded research on COPD and metabolic syndrome would advance patient-centered care

Mount Sinai-led team enhances automated method to detect common sleep disorder affecting millions

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Dr. Helen Fisher, and Dr. Judith Allen donate historic archives to the Kinsey Institute

Bridging oceans: A US-Japan approach to flood risk and climate resilience

Dense human population is linked to longer urban coyote survival

Science educator calls for climate change to be taught more in US schools

Realistic emission tests for motorbikes, mopeds and quads

Race- and gender-based microaggressions linked to higher post-birth blood pressure

Novel ‘quantum refrigerator’ is great at erasing quantum computer’s chalkboard

States struggle to curb food waste despite policies

Record cold quantum refrigerator paves way for reliable quantum computers

New discovery makes organic solar cells more efficient and stable

What we eat affects our health — and can alter how our genes function

Lung cancer test predicts survival in early stages better than current methods

Pioneering new mathematical model could help protect privacy and ensure safer use of AI  

Floods, droughts, then fires: Hydroclimate whiplash is speeding up globally

[Press-News.org] How to build a middleweight black hole
New model for intermediate black hole formation parallels growth of giant planets