Sleeping giant surprises Gaia scientists (2024)

Science & Exploration

16/04/202424033 views54 likes

ESA / /Space Science /Gaia

Wading through the wealth of data from ESA’s Gaia mission, scientists have uncovered a ‘sleeping giant’. A large black hole, with a mass of nearly 33 times the mass of the Sun, was hiding in the constellation Aquila, less than 2000 light-years from Earth. This is the first time a black hole of stellar origin this big has been spotted within the Milky Way. So far, black holes of this type have only been observed in very distant galaxies. The discovery challenges our understanding of how massive stars develop and evolve.

Matter in a black hole is so densely packed that nothing can escape its immense gravitational pull, not even light. The great majority of stellar-mass black holes that we know of are gobbling up matter from a nearby star companion. The captured material falls onto the collapsed object at high speed, becoming extremely hot and releasing X-rays. These systems belong to a family of celestial objects named X-ray binaries.

When a black hole does not have a companion close enough to steal matter from, it does not generate any light and is extremely difficult to spot. These black holes are called ‘dormant’.

To prepare for the release of the next Gaia catalogue, Data Release 4 (DR4), scientists are checking the motions of billions of stars and carrying out complex tests to ­see if anything is out of the ordinary. The motions of stars can be affected by companions: light ones, like exoplanets; heavier ones, like stars; or very heavy ones, like black holes. Dedicated teams are in place in the Gaia Collaboration to investigate any ‘odd’ cases.

One such team was deeply engaged in this work, when their attention fell on an old giant star in the constellation Aquila, at a distance of 1926 light-years from Earth. By analysing in detail the wobble in the star’s path, they found a big surprise. The star was locked in an orbital motion with a dormant black hole of exceptionally high mass, about 33 times that of the Sun.

This is the third dormant black hole found with Gaia and was aptly named ‘Gaia BH3’. Its discovery is very exciting because of the mass of the object. “This is the kind of discovery you make once in your research life,” exclaims Pasquale Panuzzo of CNRS, Observatoire de Paris, in France, who is the lead author of this finding. “So far, black holes this big have only ever been detected in distant galaxies by the LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA collaboration, thanks to observations of gravitational waves.”

The average mass of known black holes of stellar origin in our galaxy is around 10 times the mass of our Sun. Until now, the weight record was held by a black hole in an X-ray binary in the Cygnus constellation (Cyg X-1), whose mass is estimated to be around 20 times that of the Sun.

“It’s impressive to see the transformational impact Gaia is having on astronomy and astrophysics,” notes Prof. Carole Mundell, ESA Director of Science. “Its discoveries are reaching far beyond the original purpose of the mission, which is to create an extraordinarily precise multi-dimensional map of more than a billion stars throughout our Milky Way."

Unmatched accuracy

The exquisite quality of the Gaia data enabled scientists to pin down the mass of the black hole with unparalleled accuracy and provide the most direct evidence that black holes in this mass range exist.

Astronomers face the pressing question of explaining the origin of black holes as large as Gaia BH3. Our current understanding of how massive stars evolve and die does not immediately explain how these types of black holes came to be.

Most theories predict that, as they age, massive stars shed a sizable part of their material through powerful winds; ultimately, they are partly blown into space when they explode as supernovas. What remains of their core further contracts to become either a neutron star or a black hole, depending on its mass. Cores large enough to end up as black holes of 30 times the mass of our Sun are very difficult to explain.

Yet, a clue to this puzzle may lie very close to Gaia BH3.

An intriguing companion

The star orbiting Gaia BH3 at about 16 times the Sun–Earth distance is rather uncommon: an ancient giant star, that formed in the first two billion years after the Big Bang, at the time our galaxy started to assemble. It belongs to the family of the Galactic stellar halo and is moving in the opposite direction to the stars of the Galactic disc. Its trajectory indicates that this star was probably part of a small galaxy, or a globular cluster, engulfed by our own galaxy more than eight billion years ago.

The companion star has very few elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, indicating that the massive star that became Gaia BH3 could also have been very poor in heavy elements. This is remarkable. It supports, for the first time, the theory that the high-mass black holes observed by gravitational wave experiments were produced by the collapse of primeval massive stars poor in heavy elements. These early stars might have evolved differently from the massive stars we currently see in our galaxy.

The composition of the companion star can also shed light on the formation mechanism of this astonishing binary system. "What strikes me is that the chemical composition of the companion is similar to what we find in old metal-poor stars in the galaxy,” explains Elisabetta Caffau of CNRS, Observatoire de Paris, also a member of the Gaia collaboration.

“There is no evidence that this star was contaminated by the material flung out by the supernova explosion of the massive star that became BH3.” This could suggest that the black hole acquired its companion only after its birth, capturing it from another system.

Tasty appetiser

The discovery of the Gaia BH3 is only the beginning and much remains to be investigated about its baffling nature.Now that the scientists’ curiosity has been piqued, this black hole and its companion will undoubtedly be the subject of many in-depth studies to come.

The Gaia collaboration stumbled upon this ‘sleeping giant’ while checking the preliminary data in preparation for the fourth release of the Gaia catalogue. Because the finding is so exceptional they decided to announce it ahead of the official release.

The next release of Gaia data promises to be a goldmine for the study of binary systems and the discovery of more dormant black holes in our galaxy. “We have been working extremely hard to improve the way we process specific datasets compared to the previous data release (DR3), so we expect to uncover many more black holes in DR4,” concludes Berry Holl of the University of Geneva, in Switzerland, member of the Gaia collaboration.

What is a black hole?
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Notes for editors

"Discovery of a dormant 33 solar-mass black hole in pre-release Gaia astrometry" by Gaia Collaboration, P. Panuzzo, et al. is published today the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A).

Gaia is a European mission, built and operated by ESA. It was approved in 2000 as a European Space Agency Cornerstone Mission within ESA’s Horizon 2000 Plus science programme, supported by all ESA Member States. Member States also have a key role in the science portion of the mission as part of the Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC) responsible to turn the raw data into scientific products for Gaia Data Releases, in collaboration with ESA. DPAC brings together more than 450 specialists from throughout the scientific community in Europe. Gaia was designed and built by Astrium (now Airbus Defence and Space), with a core team composed of Astrium France, Germany and UK. The industrial team included 50 companies from 15 European states, along with firms from the US. The spacecraft was launched by Arianespace on 19 December 2013.

A listing of the researchers involved and the role of ESA Member States is available for media here [PDF].

Further information about this discovery

Sleeping giant surprises Gaia scientists (2024)

FAQs

Why is Gaia so accurate? ›

Gaia mission facts

Gaia is equipped with the largest digital camera ever carried into space with nearly one billion pixels. By comparison, smart phone cameras have around 10 million pixels. Gaia is detecting celestial objects that are a million times fainter than the unaided human eye can see.

How is the ESA using Gaia mapping and the purpose of the ESA Gaia mission? ›

Its goal is to create the largest, most precise three-dimensional map of the Milky Way by surveying about 1% of the galaxy's 100 billion stars. Gaia will detect and very accurately measure the motion of each star in its orbit around the center of the galaxy.

What happens to the matter in a black hole? ›

The matter continues to collapse to a point that is known as a singularity. This point has infinite mass and density and is infinitely small. The effect of this point on space-time is to distort it so that nothing can escape from the immediate region, not even light.

How is Gaia being used outside of astronomy? ›

Final answer: Beyond its primary astronomical applications, Gaia mapping data is used in fields like fundamental physics, stellar kinematics, extrasolar planet studies, and large-scale structure studies.

Is the Gaia theory correct? ›

Even so, the Gaia hypothesis continues to attract criticism, and today many scientists consider it to be only weakly supported by, or at odds with, the available evidence.

What are the criticism of the Gaia hypothesis? ›

The Gaia theory has faced several criticisms. Some critics argue that the hypothesis is not consistent with the Natural Selection Theory. They suggest that the idea of life actively participating in shaping the environment for its own optimization does not align with natural selection principles .

Is Gaia still operational? ›

Gaia is a space observatory of the European Space Agency (ESA), launched in 2013 and expected to operate until 2025.

What is the basic explanation of Gaia mapping? ›

A global space astrometry mission, Gaia is building the largest, most precise three-dimensional map of our Galaxy by surveying nearly two billion objects. Throughout the course of its mission, Gaia monitors each of its target stars about 14 times per year.

What are the interesting facts about Gaia mapping? ›

It made an accurate three-dimensional map of much of the Milky Way Galaxy. It observed starquakes on stars that were not expected to have them. It observed millions of variable stars and thousands of supernovas and asteroids. Gaia also detected new extrasolar planets.

Does time exist in a black hole? ›

From the viewpoint of an observer outside the black hole, time stops. For example, an object falling into the hole would appear frozen in time at the edge of the hole. Inside a black hole is where the real mystery lies. According to Einstein's theory, time and space, in a way, trade places inside the hole.

Could a human survive a black hole? ›

Death by black hole

No material that falls inside a black hole could survive intact. Unfortunately, because nothing can escape a black hole's event horizon — not even information — we'll never know for certain what happens when matter falls past the point of no return.

What would a singularity look like? ›

From concepts drawn from rotating black holes, it is shown that a singularity, spinning rapidly, can become a ring-shaped object. This results in two event horizons, as well as an ergosphere, which draw closer together as the spin of the singularity increases.

Did Gaia make humans? ›

She also created most everything in the physical world, including humans, who came from the clay of the Earth. Gaia was more than just a figure of creation to the Greeks. She was the earth, and, therefore, she was life itself.

Is Gaia a human? ›

In Greek mythology, Gaia (/ˈɡeɪə, ˈɡaɪə/; Ancient Greek: Γαῖα, romanized: Gaîa, a poetic form of Γῆ (Gê), meaning 'land' or 'earth'), also spelled Gaea (/ˈdʒiːə/), is the personification of Earth. Gaia is the ancestral mother—sometimes parthenogenic—of all life.

What power does Gaia have? ›

Mystical Powers

She can also command the forces of nature on Earth, such as storms and volcanic activity. Gaea has great power to heal injured living beings and to cause living beings to grow, as well as considerable telekinetic power. Though incalculably strong and durable, Gaea rarely uses her physical abilities.

What allows Gaia to be so much more accurate than Earth-bound telescopes? ›

These are not large mirrors by modern astronomical standards, but Gaia's great advantage is that it will be observing from space, where there is no atmospheric disturbance to blur the images. A smaller telescope in space can yield more accurate results than a large telescope on Earth.

What allows Gaia to measure parallax so well? ›

The GAIA satellite has two telescopes pointed in different directions 106.5 degrees apart, and forming their two images on the same detector. The distance between star images from the two fields can be measured on the detector very accurately.

Is Gaia the most powerful God? ›

Gaia is considered to be one of the most powerful deities in Greek mythology as one of the first primordial deities of the universe. Some of her powers include control over the lands and weather along with producing many strong children with or without a spouse.

How does Gaia measure proper motion? ›

When Gaia measures the distances to stars, it observes the combined effect of parallax motion and proper motion. Since parallax motion repeats every year, while proper motion is a continuous, linear effect, a few years of observational monitoring allow the Gaia scientists to separate the two effects for every star.

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