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A Remarkably Loud Quasi-Periodicity after a Star is Disrupted by a Massive Black Hole

Authors :
Pasham, Dheeraj R.
Remillard, Ronald A.
Fragile, P. Chris
Franchini, Alessia
Stone, Nicholas C.
Lodato, Giuseppe
Homan, Jeroen
Chakrabarty, Deepto
Baganoff, Frederick K.
Steiner, James F.
Coughlin, Eric R.
Pasham, Nishanth R.
Source :
Science 01 Feb 2019
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The immense tidal forces of massive black holes can rip apart stars that come too close to them. As the resulting stellar debris spirals inwards, it heats up and emits x-rays when near the black hole. Here, we report the discovery of an exceptionally stable 131-second x-ray quasi-periodicity from a black hole after it disrupted a star. Using a black hole mass indicated from host galaxy scaling relations implies that, (1) this periodicity originates from very close to the black hole's event horizon, and (2) the black hole is rapidly spinning. Our findings suggest that other disruption events with similar highly sensitive observations likely also exhibit quasi-periodicities that encode information about the fundamental properties of their black holes.<br />Comment: Re-submitted after minor comments from referees

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Science 01 Feb 2019
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1810.10713
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar7480