Our nearest supermassive black hole ‘became active’ and became a million times intense, scientists say

Andrew Griffin
Wednesday 21 June 2023 12:10 EDT
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(NASA/CXC/SAO/IXPE)

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Our nearest supermassive black hole awoke from a “period of dormancy”, becoming a million times more intense, scientists have said.

The supermassive black hole, known as Sagittarius A*, sits at the heart of the Milky Way and is about four million times more massive than the Sun. At the moment, it is what scientists call very “quiescent”, not particularly luminous or active

But about 200 years ago, it ate cosmic objects that got too close to it and became vastly more bright, scientists found. The increase in brightness happened over just a year, and is as if a single glow-worm hidden in a forest suddenly became as bright as the Sun, according to researchers.

Scientists still don’t know exactly why it happened. They will continue to examine the black hole and its switching, with the aim of understanding what would make a black hole turn active from previously being quiescent

The intense event was discovered by scientists who picked up an X-ray “echo” centuries on. It also explains the intense bright shine of galactic molecular clouds around the black hole – scientists say they are reflecting those X-rays that came out of the black hole towards the start of the 19th century.

The work is described in a new paper, ‘X-ray polarization evidence for a 200 years-old flare of Sgr A*’, published in Nature.

The IXPE data, which shows the echo of this past activity, can be seen in orange in the bottom image. It was combined with data from Chandra, another NASA X-ray observatory, seen in blue, which shows only direct light from the Galactic centre. The top image is a much wider view of the centre of the Milky Way obtained by Chandra
The IXPE data, which shows the echo of this past activity, can be seen in orange in the bottom image. It was combined with data from Chandra, another NASA X-ray observatory, seen in blue, which shows only direct light from the Galactic centre. The top image is a much wider view of the centre of the Milky Way obtained by Chandra (NASA/CXC/SAO/IXPE)

Previously, examining an X-ray in this way has been impossible. But the new work was done using the Nasa’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer, which allowed scientists to detect the X-ray light with more precision and specificity than had been possible before.

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