We need to test Einstein’s general theory of relativity to breaking point.
- Adam Ingram, University of Amsterdam
Matter falling into a black hole heats up as it plunges to its doom. Before it passes into the black hole and is lost from view forever, it can reach millions of degrees. At that temperature it shines x-rays into space.
In the 1980s, astronomers discovered that the x-rays coming from black holes vary on a range of timescales and can even follow a repeating pattern with a dimming and re-brightening taking 10 seconds to complete. As the days, weeks and then months progress, the pattern’s period shortens until the oscillation takes place 10 times every second. Then it suddenly stops altogether.
This phenomenon was dubbed a Quasi Periodic Oscillation (QPO). During the 1990s, astronomers began to suspect that the QPO was associated with a gravitational effect predicted by Einstein’s general relativity which suggested that a spinning object will create a kind of gravitational vortex. The effect is similar to twisting a spoon in honey: anything embedded in the honey will be ‘dragged’ around by the twisting spoon. In reality, this means that anything orbiting around a spinning object will have its motion affected. If an object is orbiting at an angle, its orbit will ‘precess’ – in other words, the whole orbit will change orientation around the central object. The time for the orbit to return to its initial condition is known as a precession cycle.
In 2004, NASA launched Gravity Probe B to measure this so-called Lense-Thirring effect around Earth. By analysing the resulting data, scientists confirmed that the spacecraft would turn through a complete precession cycle once every 33 million years. Around a black hole, however, the effect would be much stronger because of the stronger gravitational field: the precession cycle would take just a matter of seconds to complete, close to the periods of the QPOs.
An international team of researchers, including Dr Matt Middleton from the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, has used the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton and NASA’s NuSTAR, both x-ray observatories, to study the effect of black hole H1743-322 on a surrounding flat disc of matter known as an ‘accretion disk’.
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Image:Illustration of gravitational vortex
Credit: ESA/ATG medialab
Reproduced courtesy of the University of Cambridge
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