You might think of black holes as voracious eaters that suck up everything
in sight. But astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory have found that
the black hole at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is actually quite sloppy
when it comes to its culinary habits.
New images of Sagittarius A*, or Sgr A* (pronounced "Sagittarius A-star"),
which is approximately 26,000 light-years from Earth, reveal that the black hole
manages to suck up less than 1 percent of the gas within its reach. Instead,
most of it is tossed back out into space before it's ever devoured.
"Contrary to what some people think, black holes do not actually devour
everything that's pulled towards them," Feng Yuan of Shanghai Astronomical
Observatory in China wrote in a study about the findings. "Sgr A* is apparently
finding much of its food hard to swallow."
This answers a mystery that has been confounding astronomers for some time
-- why some black holes appear to be surprisingly dim. Black holes form when
massive stars die and the gravity is so strong that not even light can escape.
The gravitational force of black holes can be measured by X-ray emissions, which
indicate how much heat is generated.
"There's been a debate for the last 20 years or so about what actually is
happening to the matter around the black hole," said research leader Q. Daniel
Wang of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. "Whether the black hole is
accreting the matter, or actually whether the matter can be ejected. This is the
first direct evidence for outlflow in the accretion process."
The findings are the result of one of Chandra's longest observation
campaigns ever. The spacecraft collected five weeks' worth of data on Sgr A*
last year, during which time, researchers captured detailed X-ray images of
super-heated gas swirling around the black hole.
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