NASA's Hubble Finds that a Black Hole Beam Promotes Stellar Eruptions

September 26, 2024 10:00AM (EDT)Release ID: 2024-008
An artist's concept looks down into the core of the galaxy M87, which is just left of center and appears as a large blue dot. A bright blue-white, narrow and linear jet of plasma transects the illustration from center left to upper right. It begins at the source of the jet, the galaxy's black hole, which is surrounded by a blue spiral of material. At lower right is a red giant star that is far from the black hole and close to the viewer. A bridge of glowing gas links the star to a smaller white dwarf star companion immediately to its left. Engorged with infalling hydrogen from the red giant star, the smaller star exploded in a blue-white flash, which looks like numerous diffraction spikes emitted in all directions. Thousands of stars are in the background.

Summary

Nova Explosions in Double Star Systems Doubled Near Black Hole Jet

The supermassive black hole in the core of the giant elliptical galaxy M87 shoots out a blazing bright jet of plasma racing across space at nearly the speed of light. It makes the "Death Star" beam in the Star Wars trilogy look like a wimpy candle flame lighter.

Hubble astronomers have found that it seems to be dangerous just getting near to the energetic plasma jet. Stars seem to explode more frequently in the vicinity of the jet's 3,000-light-year long trajectory. The stars, called novae, erupt in double-star systems where an aging, swelled-up, normal star spills hydrogen onto a burned-out white dwarf companion star. As the hydrogen accumulates on the surface of the dwarf, it reaches a tipping point where it explodes like a hydrogen bomb. Novae frequently pop off throughout the giant galaxy of 1 trillion stars, but those near the jet seem to explode more frequently.

Astronomers guessed that something about the jet is either enhancing the fueling process and rate of explosions, or birthing new nova binaries in its vicinity. But once astronomers "crunched the numbers," both hypotheses failed. So it remains anybody's guess why black hole jets enhance the rate of nova eruptions.

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