Astronomers Spot Two Neutron Stars Being Swallowed by Black Holes

Black Holes Swallow Neutron Stars in a Single Bite, New Results Suggest

 

Astrophysicists identified two neutron stars colliding with each other and gravity observed by thr black hole. 

Astronomers Spot Collision of a Black Hole  & a Neutron Star.Two Neutron Stars Being Swallowed by Black Holes (CG)

Two Neutron Stars Being Swallowed by Black Holes

In January last year, astronomers definitively observed, for the first time, a black hole swallowing a dead star, like a raven devouring roadkill.

Then 10 days later, they saw the same act of scavenging happen again in a different, distant sector of the cosmos.

Those triumphs, reported in a paper published on Tuesday in Astrophysical Journal Letters, are the latest in the still nascent field of gravitational astronomy, which is detecting the literal stretching and scrunching of space-time caused by some of the most cataclysmic events in the universe.

“It’s the first time that we’ve actually been able to detect a neutron star and a black hole colliding with each other anywhere in the universe,” said Patrick Brady, a professor of physics at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee who serves as the spokesman for the LIGO Scientific Collaboration.

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Astronomers had suspected that pairings of black holes and neutron stars did exist. But until they saw these collisions, these hunches were not confirmed. The discovery helps fill in knowledge about the binary star systems that populate the universe, while also raising questions about why astronomers have never seen such a pair in our Milky Way galaxy.

For more than 20 years, LIGO — Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory — has been searching for these rumblings, a prediction of Einstein’s theory of general relativity. For years, the laser beams in the observatory, one in Hanford, Wash., the other in Livingston, La., detected nothing.

Then in September 2015, both locations of LIGO observed the long-sought ringing of gravitation waves.

Those waves were generated by a collision of two stellar-size black holes — punctures in the space-time fabric created when the most massive stars explode as supernovas at the end of their lives. The two black holes orbited each other, swinging around each other closer and closer until they finally merged into one.

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Two years later, LIGO detected the collision of two neutron stars — the burnt-out remnants of stars more massive than the sun but not large enough to collapse into black holes. Such collisions create most of the gold and silver in the universe.

With the help of VIRGO, a similar but smaller European gravitational wave observatory located in Italy, astronomers were able to pinpoint the part of the sky where the explosion occurred, and a series of telescopes were then able to detect particles of light, from radio waves to X-rays, emanating from that fireball.

Astronomers had long expected to find a neutron star orbiting a black hole, but in nearly half a century of searches of our Milky Way galaxy, they never found one. “So in effect, we’ve had this mystery question,” Dr. Brady said. “Why have we not seen a neutron star-black hole system?”

In 2019, two gravitational wave detections appeared to have finally bagged this elusive astronomical quarry. But one of them, in April 2019, did not hold up under scrutiny. It might have been what they were hoping it was — the rumblings of a black hole-neutron wave collision — or it might have just been random and meaningless jiggles in imperfect data.

“We think it’s unlikely that that was really an astrophysical signal,” Dr. Brady said. “So it sort of sits there as one of these things that might be, but right now we don’t have sufficient evidence to say it was.”

The second detection, on Aug. 14, 2019, remains puzzling. The larger object in the collision was definitely a black hole. The smaller one had a mass of 2.6 times that of the sun. That is larger than any neutron star that has ever been detected — and smaller than any black hole that has ever been detected. Astronomers remain unsure whether it was a neutron star or a black hole.

The new gravitational wave observations finally prove, without doubt, that these pairs exist, albeit far away from the Milky Way. The first detection of a neutron star merging with a black hole occurred on Jan. 5, 2020. The facility in Hanford, Wash., was temporarily offline, so the signal was detected in Livingston, La. The VIRGO detector in Italy picked up a faint signal, providing corroboration.

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By studying changes in the frequency of the gravitational waves, astrophysicists were able to determine the properties of the objects colliding in the distant reaches of the universe.

The black hole was about nine times the mass of the sun; the neutron star was smaller, but still about twice the mass of the star our world orbits. The collision occurred at a distance of about 900 million light-years from Earth.

Video
Cinemagraph
A simulation of a black hole and neutron star during the merger process. The gravitational wave signal is in blue and the density of the neutron star varies from yellow to orange.CreditCredit...MAYA Collaboration, Deborah Ferguson, Bhavesh Khamesra, Karan Jani, Deirdre Shoemaker, Miguel Gracia-Linares, Pablo Laguna

On Jan. 15, 2020, the Hanford site was back up, and all three instruments detected the second collision of a black hole and a neutron star. This one was a bit farther away. Both objects were a bit lighter. The neutron star was about 1.5 times the mass of the sun, and the black hole was about six times the mass of the sun.

Unlike the 2017 collision of two neutron stars, telescopes were unable to spot any particles of light from the explosions. The black holes appear to have been big enough to swallow the neutron stars quickly, reducing the chances of detectable emissions.

Alessandra Buonanno, director at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Potsdam, Germany, and a member of the LIGO science team, said the collisions generally fit with what they had expected to find. “Not something you would say strikingly unexpected,” she said.

Astrophysicists were unable to tease out signs of the black holes tearing the neutron stars apart before swallowing them. The tidal forces of a black hole on a neutron star would tell the diameter of the neutron star and that would, in turn, indicate what it was made of.


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