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Monster Black Hole Busts Theory

Posted by samzenpus on Wed Oct 17, 2007 09:44 PM
from the old-bob-and-vincent dept.
Genocaust writes "A stellar black hole much more massive than theory predicts is possible has astronomers puzzled. Stellar black holes form when stars with masses around 20 times that of the sun collapse under the weight of their own gravity at the ends of their lives. Most stellar black holes weigh in at around 10 solar masses when the smoke blows away, and computer models of star evolution have difficulty producing black holes more massive than this. The newly weighed black hole is 16 solar masses. It orbits a companion star in the spiral galaxy Messier 33, located 2.7 million light-years from Earth. Together they make up the system known as M33 X-7."
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  • by Raul654 (453029) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:46PM (#21020183) Homepage
    If theory says that black holes beyond 10 solar masses cannot form, how do they explain the conjectured supermassive black holes [wikipedia.org] at the center of our and other galaxies?
    • by RuBLed (995686) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:52PM (#21020243)
      It seems that they are in separate divisions/classes. This should explain it.

      While 16 solar masses is hefty for a stellar black hole, it is miniscule compared with the black holes thought to lie in the heart of many large galaxies. Such "supermassive" black holes have masses millions to billions times that of our sun, but they are thought to form by mechanisms different from the stellar variety.
    • by shawn(at)fsu (447153) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:52PM (#21020245) Homepage
      They mentioned that in the article. Mister Scientist thinks their are different mechacisms at work that produce the super massive black holes at the centre of galaxies. I was wondering though, is it possible that a black hole of this mass could me produces in a trinary solar system where two black holes merge, in this case leaving you with a 16 solar masses and orbiting the remain star?
      • What if you have an n-ary system in which two or more supermassive stars are sufficiently close together that after the supernova, the total mass exceeds 10 solar masses even though no individual star did? (Since the star cores would merge at the common center of gravity, they would behave as a single remnant of the combined mass, NOT as individual collapsing objects.) Alternatively, if the black hole forms in a regular fashion but is in a dense enough zone - or a zone that has an obscenely large number of extra-solar supermassive planets - that it absorbs six or more solar masses before it can evaporate a comparable amount of mass, you'd reach the desired mass. Thirdly, my guess is that all simulations assume point singularities (probably the most common kind, assuming black hole theory is correct), which means that they won't be including Kerr Ring singularities or any of the other Really Weird Forms that have been predicted.

        I'm sure that there are ways to fudge things so that the desired mass can be reached. Or, there again, the simulations could be wrong. That happens, for all that Michael Fish wishes otherwise. Well, maybe not. He stands to make a lot of money from his new book because of that fiasco.

        • by gomiam (587421) on Thursday October 18 2007, @12:23AM (#21021267)
          Reading the article, it seems that the computer models of supernovas would strip all those supermassive planets of their gaseous layers, if not blow the planets themselves away. The problem isn't the black hole being that big (that's a symptom), the problem is how do you make a star go nova "softly" like this one would have done.

          And, yes, it seems the simulations are wrong. That's why it's hard for the current nova theories (read models) to create a black hole this big.

          • by chthon (580889) on Thursday October 18 2007, @02:06AM (#21021759) Homepage Journal

            Wouldn't it be : In Soviet Russia, you eat black holes ?

            • Wouldn't it be : In Soviet Russia, you eat black holes ?

              Well, seeing how both people and goods had a habit of disappearing and never being seen again in Soviet Russia, I'd say that both forms are correct. I wonder if that reflects some deep, underlaying symmetry in the Laws of Politics ?

              As an interesting aside, the light emitted near the event horizon of a black hole experiences red shift as it climbs up the gravitational field, and the Soviet Russia's flag is... red. Does that mean that Soviet Russia

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              I think laws of physics are the same inside and outside of Soviet Russia, no joke here, move along.
            • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 18 2007, @06:34AM (#21022839)

              In Soviet Russia, you eat black holes
              In Russia, black holes are referred to as 'frozen stars', because 'black hole' in Russian is a slang term referring to the anus. Which leads to a rather unintentional interpretation of your post.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        I was wondering though, is it possible that a black hole of this mass could me produces in a trinary solar system where two black holes merge, in this case leaving you with a 16 solar masses and orbiting the remain star?

        If I am not mistaken, the largest stars tend not to be binary/trinary. Once the mass gets past a certain point, it upsets the harmonics needed to make doubles and triples. However, I can't find any verification of this mentally rusty snippet of info.
        • by Tablizer (95088) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:55PM (#21020773) Homepage Journal
          Another issue is the unlikely chance of paired stars crashing into each other. After one partner blows its top at the end of life, it usually loses some mass such that the distance between them INcreases, making them even less likely to touch or enter friction zones. (Being a black hole by itself does not increase its gravitational pull over a star of the same mass). If they are going to merge, they would more likely do so during the regular life, and we'd see samples of such massive stars. But we don't, mainly because there is an upper limit to the size of a stable star.

          Further, large stars have short lives, meaning that the time for friction to rub them closer to each other is shorter.

          However, it is true that a collision of two big mid-life stars may itself trigger a supernova because the total mass exceeds a stable size, and thus a very large black hole is formed. This may result in a black hole that *looks* like it came from a star larger than the max stable size of a star because its exceeding the stable limit itself is what triggered the formation of the hole. In short, there may be a limit to stable star size, but not to unstable star size.
             
      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:44PM (#21020677)
        Just FYI: after binary comes TERNARY, not trinary. Don't feel bad, though, it's a very common mistake which I myself have made before being corrected.
        • by Chapter80 (926879) on Thursday October 18 2007, @05:18AM (#21022551)

          Just FYI: after binary comes TERNARY, not trinary
          Regarding base-2, I've seen posts that don't talk about it, and posts that contain the term "binary".

          Regarding base-3, I've seen posts that don't talk about it, and posts that use the term "trinary", and posts that use the term "ternary".

          Seems about right...

      • by dwater (72834) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @11:20PM (#21020927)
        > their are

        you misspelled 'arse'.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      I was thinking the same thing. And you know how they get that big? By forming and then sucking up tons and stars around them. And who says this one didn't form differently? It's in a binary system now but trinary systems exist. And don't say "but it didn't suck up 6 stars." They just said in the article that some stars can be 20 solar masses. That's a really badly named unit lol.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            Yes, it's extremely hard to figure out how what you just said could possibly happen. If it was a ternary system, that means the three stars were in stable orbits. One forms a black hole. If no mass were lost, everything would remain in the same stable orbits. If mass were lost (which is almost certainly the case -- supernovas tend to throw off a lot of mass), then the star that becomes a black hole now has *less* grip on its companions than it did. If it doesn't lose them entirely, they should at least
        • Perhaps because the mass of our Sun is a variable, as is the mass of other stars. Matter falls in, matter gets expelled. Today a star might be 3 solar masses, tomorrow it might be 2.999999999999999999999999999999999976 solar masses. That sort of wild, erratic variation is no good in the exact world of astronomy.
    • by StikyPad (445176) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:00PM (#21020319) Homepage
      If theory says that black holes beyond 10 solar masses cannot form, how do they explain the conjectured supermassive black holes

      Like This [universetoday.com].

      Or, more pedantically, black holes may never form at all [newscientist.com] from the point of view of an observer outside the event horizon.
        • Likely they are referring to Hawking Radiation [wikipedia.org].
          • by ZombieWomble (893157) on Thursday October 18 2007, @03:02AM (#21022029)
            That's something of a misleading post - while a "one second" black hole would indeed release such a huge amount of energy, the creation of such a black hole is unthinkable in the LHC: The energy the protons collide with is around 14TeV, or about 10^-6 joules. That's more than a billion billion billion times lower than the one second black hole you suggest in your post. The size of black holes produced in CERN would dissipate almost instantly, with a relatively small puff of particles.
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            So, for instance, a 1 second-lived black hole has a mass of 2.28 × 10^5 kg
            Which means that in order to create such a black hole, we'd have to be able to cram 10^5 kg of mass into a singularity. That's a pretty small mass in the realm of astronomy, but it's a pretty damned big mass in the realm of particle physics.
    • See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar-mass_black_hole [wikipedia.org]

      There are different categories of Black Holes. The very wikipedia article you linked to mentioned this in the 'Formation' Section:

      - Black holes of this size can form in several ways. The most obvious is by slow accretion of matter (starting from a black hole of stellar size).

      TFA refers to an unexpected size for a Stellar-class Black Hole.
    • by Junior J. Junior III (192702) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:49PM (#21020723) Homepage
      *Stellar* black holes are black holes that originate from the aftermath of a single star going supernova.

      Super-massive black holes like what exist at the center of a galaxy don't have a well understood origin, but it is supposed that if a black hole is created in a region of space with a great deal of matter in the vicinity, it may gobble up a lot of it, adding to its mass until it becomes super-massive.

      A stellar black hole that's so big it shouldn't be possible for it to have been created by the usual supernova, and in a region of space sufficiently vacant to rule out the gobbling theory, is what is being puzzled over.
      • by ozbird (127571) on Thursday October 18 2007, @12:04AM (#21021183)
        A stellar black hole that's so big it shouldn't be possible for it to have been created by the usual supernova, and in a region of space sufficiently vacant to rule out the gobbling theory, is what is being puzzled over.

        The region of space is vacant now - it doesn't mean that it was when the black hole was feeling peckish.
        • Isn't it funny how we don't even capitalize "black hole?"
          Why would we? I can't think of any of the standard capitalisation rules that would apply. Unless your name happens to be Black Holes.
  • In the Dark (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ArcherB (796902) * on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:50PM (#21020215) Journal
    I wonder if this is where all that "dark matter" is. Scientist keep talking about how there is so much more matter than what we can detect. Well, we haven't been able to detect this until now. How much more is missing, I wonder.

    It amazes me at how much we DON'T know.
    • Technically, there is a difference between dark matter and and matter so dense its dark. Think of dark matter as "matters at hand in the universe in which we're still in the dark." On second though, "terra incognita" is a much better analogy.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Technically, there is a difference between dark matter and and matter so dense its dark. Think of dark matter as "matters at hand in the universe in which we're still in the dark." On second though, "terra incognita" is a much better analogy.

        Well, I wasn't talking about black holes being made from dark matter, but like you said, matter we were "in the dark" about or matter than we are unable to detect. Well, evidently, we were in the dark of about 75% of the matter than can exist in black holes. It wasn't
    • by value_added (719364) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:34PM (#21020611)
      It amazes me at how much we DON'T know.

      The following may help to explain things (taken from an Slashdot post):

      Indeed. In fact there is no light either. The Sun sucks dark. In fact it
      sucks dark so hard that the friction of the dark moving to the Sun
      causes the Sun to be very hot. The flow of dark towards the Sun
      interrupted by the Earth causes the side of the Earth away from the Sun
      to accumulate dark, thus causing Night. As the Earth rotates the dark
      caught on the night side can then be pulled off, this causing the
      absence of dark known as Day.

      What we call light bulbs are truly dark suckers as well. That is why
      light bulbs are hot, just like the Sun. When a light bulb is full of
      dark and won't suck dark any more, it cools off. If you look in old
      light bulbs you can even seen the accumulation of dark.

      Dark is also heavier than water. This can be seen in the oceans where
      the deeper you go the darker it gets.
  • Welcome our new 16 solar mass, inside of gigantic super universe is really a giant black hole singularity, with that weird ship from the Disney movie stuck inside, along with the tv game show host and his once she was really hot but now is sorta aging and still has trouble stacking baby blocks especially inside the 1000G black hole overlords.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:51PM (#21020233)
    They should name it Goatse.
  • by Speare (84249) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @09:52PM (#21020239) Homepage

    Sturgeon's Law (paraphrased): 90% of everything sucks.

    Just goes to show, that when you think it can't suck any worse, you find it can suck a LOT worse.

  • by robinsonne (952701) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:04PM (#21020359)
    It orbits a companion star in the spiral galaxy Messier 33

    It's not messy, it's got a lived-in, homey feel to it you insensitive clod!!!
  • by glwtta (532858) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:07PM (#21020391) Homepage
    The extra mass is Dark Mass, right?

    After all, that's how we deal with all cosmological phenomena we don't understand - prefix it with "Dark" and you're all set!
  • by confused_demon (1161841) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:18PM (#21020479)
    For this discussion it's worth keeping in mind that current computer models have real problems actually getting supernovae to explode. At one point it was so bad that I heard someone say, "If it weren't for the fact that we occasionally observe one explode, I would assure you that they cannot." It's only been in the last couple of years that someone has made a computer model that actually did it.
    • by Leperous (773048) on Thursday October 18 2007, @07:57AM (#21023427) Homepage
      "It's only been in the last couple of years that someone has made a computer model that actually did it."

      Not true. As a numerical relativitist, I can tell you that no decent 3D simulations of supernovae currently exist.

      Half the problem is that the physics is simply unknown - is it sufficient for your model to contain rotation, magnetic fields, and what about the equation of state of the plasma? Neutrinos are also thought to play an incredibly important role in the supernova explosion mechanism, and subsequent nucleosynthesis (and other processes) that go on during the supernova event itself. The other half is the sheer computing power to evolve your equations over decent time scales with enough resolution, not to mention making sure the numerical methods you employ work.

      There are plenty of groups who are currently working towards 3D evolutions without any neutrino transport, and I think some people have done neutrinos in 1D. Try checking out some of the work by Leibendorfer [arxiv.org], for example.

      A quick run down of the supernova event though, since the article skims over it very lightly: heavy elements gradually build up at the core (nickel and iron especially), and nuclear fusion shuts down due to their high binding energies [wikipedia.org]. As a result, outwards pressure ("thermal support") is lost, and at some critical moment the core will rapidly collapse onto itself (on a timescale of less than a second) as gravity becomes the dominant force. The outer layers will also in-fall onto this collapsing core.

      Depending on the mass of the star, we'd expect the core to collapse into some kind of 'proto' neutron star, or straight into a black hole, if it's massive enough. In the case of the former, neutrinos escaping from the cooling central proto neutron star deposit energy into the outer layers, and drive the actual supernova explosion-event. In the case of the latter, I'm not sure that you'd actually see much of a supernova since neutrinos wouldn't be able to escape from a black hole - or at least the explosion mechanism would be different. There is an 'intermediate' option though: a proto neutron star that later on collapses into a black hole, from the still in-falling outer layers. If this happens you'd expect both a black hole, and pretty violent supernova to boot.

      I'm not sure about the numbers presented in the article either. Typically, stars above 8 solar masses will collapse and create a supernova and neutron star remnant. Stars over 20 solar masses should form a neutron star which later collapses into a black hole (as is the case here). Stars over 50 solar masses or so will probably just collapse straight into a black hole, with unknown supernova mechanisms.

  • by gozu (541069) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:41PM (#21020647) Journal
    Well, science has been vainquished, therefore proving the existence of God once and for all.

      But...

    ONCE AND FOR ALL!

  • hmm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thatskinnyguy (1129515) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @10:45PM (#21020687)
    One black hole consumes another black hole creating one gigantic gravitational singularity. Case closed.
  • by fahrbot-bot (874524) on Wednesday October 17 2007, @11:51PM (#21021121)
    ...computer models of star evolution have difficulty producing black holes more massive than this...

    Perhaps they need to upgrade to another OS [slashdot.org] better optimized for modeling black holes... Unless they're saving this for modeling those super-massive ones.

  • ... to this story and I couldn't help but agree.

    After all, with it being 2.7 million light years away, we certainly know that this story couldn't have been breaking news any later than the end of the last great ice age.