An international team of researchers has confirmed that a possible
microlensing event witnessed in 2011 was due to the presence of a
free-floating black hole roaming through interstellar space—the first of its
kind ever observed. The group has published a paper describing their
findings on the arXiv preprint server.
Scientists have assumed for some time that there are many black holes
wandering around in interstellar space, but until now they had not found
one. This is due to the very nature of a black hole—they are difficult to
spot against the black backdrop of space. Still, the evidence for their
existence was strong. Prior research has shown that black holes are often
formed when stars reach the end of their lives and their cores collapse,
generally producing a supernova. And because many such supernova have been
observed, it seemed clear that many black holes must have been created as a
result.
But finding them has meant looking for lensing effects, when light from
stars is bent by the pull of the black hole. Given the great distances, the
lensing effect is slight, making it nearly impossible to detect using even
the best modern telescopes. But luck prevailed in 2011 when two project
teams looking for such lensing spotted a star that appeared to brighten for
no apparent reason. Intrigued, the researchers with this new effort began
analyzing the data from Hubble. For six years, they watched as the light
changed, hoping that the change was due to magnification from a black hole.
Then, they found something else—the position of the star appeared to change.
The researchers suggest the change could only be due to an unseen moving
object exerting a force that was pulling on the light as it passed by—an
interstellar black hole. The researchers continued to study the star and its
light, and eventually ruled out the possibility of any light coming from the
lensing and also confirmed that the magnification had a long duration, both
of which are prerequisites to confirming the existence of a black hole.
Taken altogether, the evidence is strong enough to confirm the sighting of a
free-floating black hole. The researchers were even able to measure its
size, at seven solar masses. They also found that it is traveling at
approximately 45 km/second.
Reference:
Kailash C. Sahu et al, An Isolated Stellar-Mass Black Hole Detected Through
Astrometric Microlensing. arXiv:2201.13296v1 [astro-ph.SR],
arxiv.org/abs/2201.13296
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics