Berliner Boersenzeitung - First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team

EUR -
AED 4.272323
AFN 76.901107
ALL 96.34399
AMD 443.867208
ANG 2.08242
AOA 1066.771894
ARS 1668.20484
AUD 1.756258
AWG 2.09399
AZN 1.976567
BAM 1.953034
BBD 2.343182
BDT 142.218617
BGN 1.952761
BHD 0.438569
BIF 3436.648432
BMD 1.163328
BND 1.50867
BOB 8.067611
BRL 6.323501
BSD 1.163353
BTN 104.720165
BWP 15.477151
BYN 3.36455
BYR 22801.223172
BZD 2.339797
CAD 1.608062
CDF 2596.547997
CHF 0.938672
CLF 0.02742
CLP 1075.670733
CNY 8.224839
CNH 8.22457
COP 4457.231965
CRC 568.095569
CUC 1.163328
CUP 30.828184
CVE 110.109084
CZK 24.283648
DJF 207.167538
DKK 7.468866
DOP 74.584388
DZD 151.309343
EGP 55.258182
ERN 17.449916
ETB 180.850491
FJD 2.626099
FKP 0.87253
GBP 0.87349
GEL 3.135191
GGP 0.87253
GHS 13.291237
GIP 0.87253
GMD 84.92322
GNF 10112.680313
GTQ 8.911381
GYD 243.396394
HKD 9.050992
HNL 30.640612
HRK 7.528124
HTG 152.324307
HUF 383.718951
IDR 19418.266183
ILS 3.747236
IMP 0.87253
INR 104.815303
IQD 1524.041937
IRR 48990.628525
ISK 148.78808
JEP 0.87253
JMD 186.505905
JOD 0.824836
JPY 181.307536
KES 150.3603
KGS 101.733296
KHR 4657.425043
KMF 490.924645
KPW 1046.994789
KRW 1708.078917
KWD 0.357293
KYD 0.969531
KZT 594.478211
LAK 25230.381892
LBP 104180.926226
LKR 358.991663
LRD 205.340118
LSL 19.754527
LTL 3.435004
LVL 0.703685
LYD 6.322048
MAD 10.747082
MDL 19.725154
MGA 5187.676479
MKD 61.55284
MMK 2443.021959
MNT 4127.457164
MOP 9.323298
MRU 46.395304
MUR 53.652889
MVR 17.913837
MWK 2017.352074
MXN 21.202066
MYR 4.784783
MZN 74.34859
NAD 19.754527
NGN 1688.476823
NIO 42.809381
NOK 11.789849
NPR 167.552464
NZD 2.016495
OMR 0.447293
PAB 1.163358
PEN 3.913259
PGK 4.937009
PHP 68.818402
PKR 328.799615
PLN 4.234408
PYG 8000.670946
QAR 4.240495
RON 5.088162
RSD 117.389042
RUB 89.045059
RWF 1692.70311
SAR 4.366162
SBD 9.574876
SCR 17.313484
SDG 699.740757
SEK 10.956657
SGD 1.509627
SHP 0.872797
SLE 27.567156
SLL 24394.39831
SOS 663.663097
SRD 44.973043
STD 24078.534907
STN 24.465357
SVC 10.179586
SYP 12862.717918
SZL 19.749035
THB 37.12993
TJS 10.673985
TMT 4.08328
TND 3.417261
TOP 2.801014
TRY 49.504016
TTD 7.881873
TWD 36.263833
TZS 2850.153307
UAH 49.045052
UGX 4116.171448
USD 1.163328
UYU 45.445648
UZS 13949.247684
VES 296.12732
VND 30665.318511
VUV 141.743431
WST 3.244067
XAF 655.032281
XAG 0.020154
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.143951
XCG 2.096731
XDR 0.814514
XOF 655.02947
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.511843
ZAR 19.815368
ZMK 10471.343142
ZMW 26.903021
ZWL 374.591049
  • RYCEF

    0.3100

    14.8

    +2.09%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    23.32

    -0.47%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    75.5

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    73.07

    +0.01%

  • RBGPF

    0.8500

    79.2

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0250

    12.445

    -0.2%

  • RELX

    -0.7850

    39.535

    -1.99%

  • GSK

    0.0600

    48.47

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0900

    16.23

    +0.55%

  • AZN

    -0.1000

    90.08

    -0.11%

  • JRI

    -0.0750

    13.715

    -0.55%

  • BCC

    -0.5000

    72.55

    -0.69%

  • BTI

    0.4350

    57.445

    +0.76%

  • BP

    0.0950

    35.925

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    -0.3300

    23.22

    -1.42%

  • CMSD

    0.0350

    23.285

    +0.15%

First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team
First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team / Photo: - - European Southern Observatory/AFP/File

First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team

A team of astrophysicists known for debunking previous supposed black holes announced a discovery of their own on Monday: the first "dormant" stellar-mass black hole spotted orbiting a star in a nearby galaxy.

Text size:

While these black holes are thought to be common throughout the universe, they have proved difficult to find, and they have themselves rejected several possible candidates in recent years.

Now the international team has found a "needle in a haystack," said Tomer Shenar, an astrophysicist at the University of Amsterdam and lead author of a new study in the Nature Astronomy journal.

The team was searching the skies for something that could eventually become a binary black hole, in which two black holes orbit each other after swallowing their stars in a supernovae explosion.

"We found a quite massive star, that weighs 25 times the mass of our Sun, that is orbiting around something that we do not see," Shenar told AFP.

They believe the blue star, which is in the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy that neighbours our Milky Way, is locked in a death dance with a black hole that has nine times the mass of our Sun.

These kinds of black holes are normally detected by the X-ray radiation they emit as they collect material from their companion star.

But this binary system, known as VFTS 243, is called dormant because it does not emit X-rays -- it is not close enough to suck matter from its star.

- 'Black hole destroyer' -

Hugues Sana, astrophysicist at the KU Leuven University in Belgium, said the Milky Way alone is thought to have around 100 million stellar-mass black holes, which are far smaller than their supermassive big brothers.

However only 10 have been found, said Sana, a co-author of the study.

This could be because many are laying dormant, biding their time to eventually swallow their companion star.

Sana said observing them was like watching two people dance in a dark room, one dressed in white and the other in black. You might only see one dancer, but you know the other one is there.

"We've never really detected such systems before," Shenar told AFP. "There have been a few claims in the last years, but they have all more or less been refuted," Shenar told AFP.

Indeed, members of his team were among those rejecting previous discoveries, by laying out alternatives for what the data could indicate.

Because of this, Shenar said they expected extra scrutiny.

So they went about meticulously eliminating all the other possibilities, Shenar said, until they were satisfied that "it's either a fat, invisible alien -- or a black hole".

Then they called the most famous black hole debunker they knew.

Kareem El-Badry of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has been "debunking black holes one after another" over the last couple of years, Tomer said, dubbing him the "black hole destroyer".

"I sent him the data and I told him, listen, we found this object -- prove me wrong," Tomer said.

"I had my doubts," said El-Badry, who joined the team and ran his own simulations.

"But I could not find a plausible explanation for the data that did not involve a black hole."

- Not with a bang, but a whimper -

The discovery could also give an insight into how black holes are formed.

Stellar-mass black holes are believed to be born during the death of a large star, in a massive supernovae explosion.

The force of the blast knocks black holes in a binary system into an elliptical, rather than circular orbit.

However, VFTS 243 has an orbit that is also perfectly circular.

"That means that the star immediately vanished into the black hole," Shenar said.

"This has a lot of implications as to how these black hole pairs form," he said, adding that VFTS 243's star could eventually collapse in a similar way.

Andrew Norton, an astrophysicist at Britain's Open University who was not involved in the study, said "this is important evidence that all such stars may not end their lives in supernovae explosions".

Shenar said he welcomed other scientists trying to debunk the debunkers.

"If someone comes and debunks this as well, I'm sure they will have a pretty fantastic explanation -- like the fat alien."

(P.Werner--BBZ)