Studies of Past X-ray Flares from Sgr A*
In a new Nature paper astronomers have reported exciting evidence that the supermassive black hole at the center of our Galaxy, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A* for short), produced an intense flare of X-rays about 200 years ago. Sgr A* is 28,000 light-years from Earth, but even from this considerable distance, if a similar flare occurred today then X-ray telescopes like IXPE and Chandra may be damaged if they looked at Sgr A*.
Currently Sgr A* shows frequent but weak outbursts, and has been referred to as a “sleeping giant” by members of the Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration.
In the new study astronomers learned about Sgr A*’s past outbursts by observing X-rays from clouds of gas around the supermassive black hole. While the primary X-rays from previous outbursts would have reached Earth in the past, X-rays reflected from clouds of gas will take a longer path and can arrive in time to be recorded by telescopes like Chandra and IXPE. This idea goes back decades, with the astronomers referring to a paper published in 1980. In the 1990s, several papers reported evidence for X-ray flares from the center of the Galaxy, including one in 1996 titled “ASCA View of Our Galactic Center: Remains of Past Activities in X-Rays?”.
After Chandra was launched in 1999, it began to add to the evidence for a flare from our Galactic supermassive black hole. First, in 2007 a Chandra press release in 2007 reported that an X-ray source, probably Sgr A*, became about 100,000 times brighter for about two to three years approximately 60 years ago. Then a Chandra press release in 2013 reported evidence for two major outbursts from Sgr A* in the past few hundred years.
The new observations by IXPE gave an important test of these claims. If X-rays from a past Sgr A* flare were indeed reflecting off nearby clouds of gas, then IXPE should observe the X-rays to be polarized, i.e. the X-rays should mainly oscillate in one direction. Furthermore, the inferred direction of the original X-rays should point back to Sgr A*. The new Nature paper led by Frédéric Marin shows that both predictions are correct, making a strong case that Sgr A* was not a sleeping giant about 200 years ago.
— Peter Edmonds
Please note this is a moderated blog. No pornography, spam, profanity or discriminatory remarks are allowed. No personal attacks are allowed. Users should stay on topic to keep it relevant for the readers.
Read the privacy statement