Astronomers: Supermassive Black Hole in NGC 1365 Spins at Nearly Light-Speed

An international team of astronomers using data from the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array and ESA’s XMM-Newton X-ray satellites has been able to determine how fast the supermassive black hole at the center of the spiral galaxy NGC 1365 spins.

This image shows a supermassive black hole surrounded by a hot accretion disk, while some inspiraling material is funneled into a wispy blue jet (NASA / JPL-Caltech)

This image shows a supermassive black hole surrounded by a hot accretion disk, while some inspiraling material is funneled into a wispy blue jet (NASA / JPL-Caltech)

A black hole’s gravity is so strong that, as the black hole spins, it drags the surrounding space along. The edge of this spinning hole is called the event horizon. Any material crossing the event horizon is pulled into the black hole. Inspiraling matter collects into an accretion disk, where friction heats it and causes it to emit X-rays.

The team measured X-rays from the center of NGC 1365 to determine where the inner edge of the accretion disk was located. This Innermost Stable Circular Orbit – the disk’s point of no return – depends on the black hole’s spin. Since a spinning black hole distorts space, the disk material can get closer to the black hole before being sucked in.

“This is the first time anyone has accurately measured the spin of a supermassive black hole,” said Dr Guido Risaliti of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and INAF – Arcetri Observatory, lead author of a paper published in the journal Nature.

Astronomers want to know the black hole’s spin for several reasons. The first is physical – only two numbers define a black hole: mass and spin. By learning those two numbers, you learn everything there is to know about the black hole. Most importantly, the black hole’s spin gives clues to its past and by extension the evolution of its host galaxy.

“The black hole’s spin is a memory, a record, of the past history of the galaxy as a whole.”

According to the team, the supermassive black hole in NGC 1365 spins so fast that its surface is traveling at nearly the speed of light.

Although the black hole is currently as massive as several million Suns, it wasn’t born that big. It grew over billions of years by accreting stars and gas, and by merging with other black holes.

Spin results from a transfer of angular momentum, like playing on a children’s swing. If you kick at random times while you swing, you’ll never get very high. But if you kick at the beginning of each downswing, you go higher and higher as you add angular momentum.

Similarly, if the black hole grew randomly by pulling in matter from all directions, its spin would be low. Since its spin is so close to the maximum possible, the black hole in NGC 1365 must have grown through ‘ordered accretion’ rather than multiple random events.

Studying a supermassive black hole also allows theorists to test Einstein’s general theory of relativity in extreme conditions. Relativity describes how gravity affects the structure of space-time, and nowhere is space-time more distorted than in the immediate vicinity of a black hole.

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Bibliographic information: G. Risaliti et al. 2013. A rapidly spinning supermassive black hole at the centre of NGC 1365. Nature 494, pp. 449–451; doi: 10.1038/nature11938

  • Brandon

    Your mother’s a black hole.

  • Brandon

    Your mother’s a black hole.

    • Immature

      LOL

    • Immature

      LOL

  • galaxys

    whoa dude…

  • galaxys

    whoa dude…

  • kakes

    aren’t black holes not even confirmed to exist yet?

  • Batman_always_be_batman

    I’m just curious as to why black holes kick out radiation? I mean if light is a particle and it gets sucked into the centre of a black hole, why doesn’t the radiation stay there? Either blackholes are not the bottomless pits of space storage they seem to be or else the polarity of radiation acts like a magnet and repulses the particles. I have nooooo clue as to what I’m talking about so if someone could explain that would be nice lol

    • Miramon

      1. Infalling matter emits radiation before it enters the black hole. The particles are being ripped apart before they pass the point of no return and this naturally results in the emission of radiation — a great deal of it.

      2. The black hole itself slowly evaporates, emitting radiation as it does. For big black holes this effect is negligible, but small black holes can just sort of boil away. This is called Hawking radiation. It’s never been measured, though, since no one has a tiny black hole sitting around in a lab.

      • Marc Forrester

        Also, light isn’t really a particle, although it shares a few properties with particles. Particles are a second order effect where light orbits itself in a tight spiral. More or less.

        Hawking radiation occurs because flat, empty space is not dead and lifeless, but seething with quantum foam, in which matter and antimatter particles continually almost come into existence, but neutralise each other. When this happens exactly on the event horizon, one particle falls into the black hole, and its opposite escapes into our universe.

        An artificial black hole would be the last power source we’d ever need.
        (Especially if we dropped it into the planet.)

    • http://www.facebook.com/devin.hahn Devin Hahn

      Black Holes are myths, sorry guys…. Primer Fields, it’s fringe science but holy hell would it obliterate the standard model.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=9EPlyiW-xGI#t=1182s

  • Miramon

    The article is wrong: black holes are also defined by charge.

    • https://www.google.nl/search?q=yellow+permanent+marker&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&um=1&ie=UTF-8&hl=en&tbm=isch&source=og&sa=N Yellow ink

      and age, and position

  • omnichronos

    It may be a leap of logic but given it has attained nearly the maximum rotation, could it be that it has been created by intelligence beings to form an Einstein-Rosen bridge for space travel?

    • Gerk

      You’re right. It IS a leap of logic.

      • Marc Forrester

        Maybe if it was a toroid, was broadcasting navigation data, and we found a network of hundreds of identical ones.

  • http://www.facebook.com/devin.hahn Devin Hahn

    Primer fields theory plans on making black holes a myth…. Maybe it’s stupid?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=9EPlyiW-xGI#t=1182s

  • farang

    This is an artist’s rendition of what the artist thinks a black hole looks like: click the link to wikipedia in opening paragraph spiral galaxy NGC 1365 ” and you will see images taken…the real image…and there is no “black hole” to be seen there….because none exist.

    Sorry, but the pseudo-science of black holes needs fake equations to “work.”

  • jtnichol

    OH whew! I misread that…I thought it said Washington’s Black Hole “Spends” at the speed of light…

  • PhysStudent

    I don’t understand which part of the black hole is travelling at light speed. How does one define the surface of a black hole? If it is the event horizon, isn’t this a well-known property of black holes? I haven’t even begun general relativity yet, so I may be a bit naive here.