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ASTROPHYSICAL BLACK HOLES
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ASTROPHYSICAL BLACK HOLES

Jan 11, 2016

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ASTROPHYSICAL BLACK HOLES. SOME HISTORY. Escape velocity v u 2 = 2 GM/R. Earth v esc = 11 km/s Jupiter v esc = 60 km/s Sun v esc = 600 km/s Moon v esc = 2 km/s. r = 2 G M/v esc 2. J. Michel P. Laplace r(v esc =c) = ?. r g = 2 G M/c 2. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: ASTROPHYSICAL  BLACK  HOLES

ASTROPHYSICAL BLACK HOLES

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SOME HISTORY

Escape velocity vu2 = 2 GM/R

Earth vesc = 11 km/s

Jupiter vesc = 60 km/s

Sun vesc = 600 km/s

Moon vesc = 2 km/s

J. Michel

P. Laplace r(vesc=c) = ?

r = 2 G M/vesc2

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rg = 2 G M/c2

rg gravitational radius

Schwarzshild’s radius (rS)

radius of event horizon

rg = 3 M/MSUN km

Term „black hole” introduced by J. Wheeler in 1964

For neutron star: rg ≈ 4.2 km rNS ≈ 10 km

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From 7 orbits:

MBH = (3.7 ± 0.2) x 106 MSUN

(Ghez & al., 2005)

Star S0-16 approaches the focus of the orbit to a distance of ~ 45 A.U. (~ 6 light hours or ~ 600 RS )

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From new analysis of orbit of S0-2 (astrometry & RVs from Keck 10 m):

MBH = (4.5 ± 0.4) x 106 MSUN

independently D = 8.4 ± 0.4 kpc

(Ghez & al., 2008)

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HOW ARE BLACK HOLES CREATED ?

They are evolutionary remnants of massive stars

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FINAL PRODUCTS OF STELLAR EVOLUTION

● low mass stars (M ≤ 10 MSUN)

● massive stars (10 MSUN ≤ M ≤ 20 MSUN)

WHITE DWARFS M ~ 0.2 ÷ 1.3 MSUN, R ~ 10 000 km

NEUTRON STARS M ~ 1 ÷ 2 MSUN, R ~ 10 km

BLACK HOLES M ≥ 3 MSUN

observed M ~ 4 ÷ 33 MSUN

● very massive stars (M ≥ 20 MSUN)

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X-RAY SKY (UHURU, 1977)

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Black holes can grow up i.e. increase their masses.

This is done by attracting the matter from the neighbourhood (BH acts as a „vacuum cleaner”) or by mergers.

In this way intermediate mass BHs (thousands solar masses) and then supermassive black holes (millions to billions solar masses) are created.

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● STELLAR MASS BHs

● SUPERMASSIVE BHs

● INTERMEDIATE MASS BHs

3 CLASSES OF BHs

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HOW DO WE KNOW THAT BLACK HOLES ARE THERE ?

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ALL THESE ARGUMENTS PROVIDE ONLY CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE

HARD EVIDENCE COMES ONLY FROM DYNAMICAL ESTIMATE OF THE MASS OF THE COMPACT OBJECT

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UPPER MASS LIMIT for NSs

● THEORY

● OPPENHEIMER-VOLKOFF MASS:

MOV ≈ 1.4 ÷ 2.7 MSUN depending on the equation of state

FOR EXTREME EQUATION OF STATE : P=ρc2 (assuming only GR

and causality):

MOV ≈ 3.2 MSUN for non-rotating NS

MOV ≈ 3.9 MSUN for maximally rotating NS

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● OBSERVATIONS

● BINARY RADIO PULSARS

MNS ≈ 1.33 ÷ 1.44 MSUN (until recently)

● BINARY X-RAY PULSARS MNS ≈ 1.1 ÷ 1.9 MSUN (large errors)

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NEW DETERMINATIONS OF NS MASSES

● PSR J0737-3039B M = 1.250 ± 0.005 MSUN (Lyne & al., 2004)

● PSR J1903+0327 M = 1.67 ± 0.01 MSUN

(Champion & al., 2008)

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NGC 6440B• After ~1 year timing this pulsar,

we have obtained a good measurement of the rate of advance of periastron. If fully relativistic, this implies a total system mass of ~2.92 ± 0.25 solar masses!

• The companion has likely only ~0.1 solar masses. Median of probability for pulsar mass is 2.74 solar masses.

• There is a 99% probability of mass being larger than 2 solar masses, 0.1% probability of having a “normal” mass.

• Is this a super-massive neutron star? From: Freire et al. (2008a), ApJ 675,

670

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PSR J1903+0327

Freire, 2009

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CONFIRMED BHs IN XRBs

Name Porb Opt. Sp. X-R C MBH/Msun

Cyg X-1 5d6 O9.7 Iab pers μQ 20 ± 5

LMC X-3 1d70 B3 V pers 6 ÷ 9

LMC X-1 4d22 O7-9 III pers 10.9 ± 1.4

SS 433 13d1 ~ A7 Ib pers μQ 16 ± 3

LS 5039 3d906 O7f V pers μQ 2.7 ÷ 5.0

XTE J1819-254 2d817 B9 III T μQ 6.8 ÷ 7.4

GX 339-4 1d76 F8-G2 III RT μQ ≥ 6

GRO J0422+32 5h09 M2 V T 4 ± 1

A 0620-00 7h75 K4 V RT 11 ± 2

GRS 1009-45 6h96 K8 V T 4.4 ÷ 4.7

XTE J1118+480 4h1 K7-M0 V T 8.5 ± 0.6

GS 1124-684 10h4 K0-5 V T 7.0 ± 0.6

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CONFIRMED BHs IN XRBs (cont.)

Name Porb Opt. Sp. X-R C MBH/Msun

GS 1354-645 2d54 G0-5 III T > 7.8 ± 0.5

4U 1543-47 1d12 A2 V RT 8.5 ÷ 10.4

XTE J1550-564 1d55 K3 III RT μQ 10.5 ± 1.0

XTE J1650-500 7h63 K4 V T μQ 4.0 ÷ 7.3

GRO J1655-40 2d62 F3-6 IV RT μQ 6.3 ± 0.5

4U 1705-250 12h54 K5 V T 5.7 ÷ 7.9

GRO J1719-24 14h7 M0-5 V T > 4.9

XTE J1859+226 9h16 ~ G5 T 8 ÷ 10

GRS 1915+105 33d5 K-M III RT μQ 14 ± 4.4

GS 2000+25 8h26 K5 V T 7.1 ÷ 7.8

GS 2023+338 6d46 K0 IV RT 10.0 ÷ 13.4

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INTERMEDIATE MASS BHs

● range of masses: ~ 102 ÷ 104 MSUN

TWO CLASSES OF CANDIDATES:

● ULXs

● globular clusters

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GLOBULAR CLUSTERS

Do some of them contain IMBHs ?

Some of them, probably, yes.

How many – it remains an open question.

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Brightness profiles

rc/rh

clusters with IMBHs have expanded cores (rc/rh > 0.1)

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Trenti (2006) considered a sample of 57 old globular clusters

For at least half of them, he found rc/rh ≥ 0.2

IMBHs necessary !

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Velocity dispersion

correlates well with MBH

(IMBH or SMBH)

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Gebhardt et al., 2002

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STRONGEST CANDIDATES

● [G1 MBH ~ 20 000 MSUN Gebhardt et al., 2005]

● M15 MBH ~ 2 000 MSUN Gerssen et al., 2003

● ω Cen MBH ~ 50 000 MSUN Noyola et al., 2006

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Are ULXs BH binaries (IMBH binaries) ?

Some of them – yes!

The term „ULXs” is probably a sort of an umbrella covering several different classes of objects

One of them is, most likely, a class of XRBs containing IMBHs

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Lx ≈ (2.4 ÷ 16) x 1040 erg/s (if Lx = LEd, Mx = 150 ÷ 1000 Msun)

QPOs: 0.054 & 0.114 Hz

Mx ~ 200 ÷ 5000 Msun

probably accreting from a ~ 25 Msun giant filling its Roche lobe

Porb ≈ 62 d

M 82 X-1

In dense stellar cluster MGG-11, 7 ÷ 12 Myr old

(Patruno et al., 2006)

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SUPERMASSIVE BHs

●range of masses: 3x105 ÷ 6x1010 MSUN

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DIFFERENT WAYS OF DETERMINING MBH

● Kepler’s law

● individual stars

● water masers

● MBH–Mbulge relation

● „reverberation” (also based on Kepler’s law)

● „variance” (X-ray variability)

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Kepler’s law – water masers

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NGC 4258 MBH = (3.9 ± 0.1) x 107 MSUN (Herrnstein et al., 1999)

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MBH-Mbulge relation

Hoering & Rix, 2004

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● highest masses

TON 618 MBH ≈ 6.6 x 1010 MSUN

5 AGNs with MBH > 1010 MSUN

● lowest masses

NGC 4395 MBH ≈ 3.6 x 105 MSUN

Sgr A* MBH ≈ 4 x 106 MSUN

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A binary composed of two supermassive BHs

Quasar OJ287

Porb ≈ 12 yr

e = 0.66

M1 ≈ 18 bilions of solar masses

M2 ≈ 100 milions of solar masses• optical flashes twice per orbital period

• strong GR effects

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Emission of gravitational waves is very efficient.

In a few thousand years one black hole will crash into another.

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SPINS of BHs Spins of accreting BHs could be deduced

from:

1. X-ray spectra (continua)

require the knowledge of MBH, i & d

2. X-ray spectra (lines)

require the proper substraction of continuum

3. kHz QPOs

require the knowledge of MBH and the proper theory of QPOs

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Specific angular momentum for circular orbits

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X-RAY SPECTRA

Zhang et al. (1997): GRO J1655-40 a* = 0.93

GRS 1915+105 a* ≈ 1.0

Gierliński et al. (2001): GRO J1655-40 a* = 0.68 ÷ 0.88

McClintock et al. LMC X-3 a* < 0.26

(2006, 2009): GRO J1655-40 a* = 0.65 ÷ 0.80

4U 1543-47 a* = 0.70 ÷ 0.85

LMC X-1 a* = 0.81 ÷ 0.94

GRS 1915+105 a* > 0.98

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SPECTRAL LINES

MODELING THE SHAPE OF Fe Kα LINE

Miller et al. (2004): GX339-4 a* ≥ 0.8 ÷ 0.9

Miller et al. (2005): GRO J1655-40 a* > 0.9

XTE J1550-564 a* > 0.9

Miller et al. (2002): XTE J1650-500 a* ≈ 1.0

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Miller (2004)

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Reis et al. (2008) determined the spin of BH in GX 339-4 (from RXTE & XMM):

a* = 0.935 ± 0.02 at 90 % confidence (!)

rin = 2.02+0.02-0.06 rg at very high state

rin = 2.04+0.07-0.02 rg at low/hard state

Miller et al. (2008) did this from Suzaku & XMM:

a* = 0.93 ± 0.05

NEW ERA OF PRECISION

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SUMMARY OF SPIN DETERMINATIONS FROM Fe Kα LINE

Cyg X-1 a* = 0.05 (1) 4U 1543-475 a* = 0.3 (1) SAX J1711.6-3808 a* = 0.2 ÷ 0.8 SWIFT J1753.5-0127 a* = 0.61 ÷ 0.87 XTE J1908+094 a* = 0.75 (9) XTE J1550-564 a* = 0.76 (1) XTE J1650-500 a* = 0.79 (1) GX 339-4 a* = 0.94 (2) GRO J1655-40 a* = 0.98 (1)

Miller et al., 2009

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GRO J1655-40 300 ± 23 6.3 ± 0.5

450 ± 20

XTE J1550-564 184 ± 26 10.5 ± 1.0

272 ± 20

H 1743-322 166 ± 8

240 ± 3

GRS 1915+105 41 ± 1 14 ± 4.4

67 ± 5

113

164 ± 2

4U 1630-472 184 ± 5

XTE J1859+226 193 ± 4 9 ± 1

XTE J1650-500 250 5.5 ± 1.5

kHz QPOs Name νQPO [Hz] MBH [MSUN]

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MASS ESTIMATES BASED ON SPINS

PARAMETRIC EPICYCLIC RESONANCE THEORY

(Abramowicz & Kluzniak, since 2001)

● simple resonance (2:1, 3:2 etc.)

● „humpy” resonance

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a ≈ 0.7 ÷ 0.99a* ≈ 0.7 ÷ 0.99

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BHs SPINS (summary)

(1) GRS 1915+105 has a rotation close to nearly maximal spin ( a* >0.98)

(2) several other systems (GX 339-4, LMC X-1, GRO J1655-40, XTE J1650-500, XTE J1550-564, XTE J1908+094 and SWIFT J1753.5-0127 have large spins

(a* ≥ 0.65)

(3) not all accreting black holes have large spins (robust results a* < 0.26 for LMC X-3 and a* ≈ 0.05 for Cyg X-1)

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New VLBI observations at 1.3 mm (Doeleman et al., 2008) permitted us to see (for the first time) the structures on the scale of the event horizon!

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Doeleman et al., 2008

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The diameter of the event horizon of Sgr A* is ~ 20 μas (for d = 8 kpc)

The apparent size for a distant observer should be (due to light bending) ~ 52 μas for non-rotating BH or ~ 45 μas for maximally rotating BH

The measured size (major-axis) of Sgr A* is

37+16-10 μas

the emission from Sgr A* is not exactly centered on a BH (jet?, disc?)

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Images calculated for RIAF disc emission close to the event horizon (Yuan et al., 2009) indicate that disc is highly inclined or Sgr A* is rotating fast.

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Yuan et al., 2009

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Yuan et al., 2009