Stabroek News Sunday

Astronomer­s detect Milky Way's second-largest...

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From 25A expected to see," said Pasquale Panuzzo, a research engineer at the French research agency CNRS working at the Observatoi­re de Paris and lead author of the study published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysi­cs.

For instance, the black hole, called Gaia BH3, and its companion are traveling within the galaxy in the opposite direction of how stars typically orbit in the Milky Way.

Gaia BH3 probably formed after the death of a star that was more than 40 as massive as the sun, the researcher­s said.

Black holes that result from the collapse of a single star are called stellar black holes. Gaia BH3 is the largest-known stellar black hole, according to astronomer and study coauthor Tsevi Mazeh of the Tel Aviv University in

Israel.

Stellar black holes are dwarfed in size by the supermassi­ve black holes inhabiting the center of most galaxies. One such black hole called Sagittariu­s A*, or Sgr A*, is located at the heart of the Milky Way. It possesses 4 million times the mass of our sun and is located about 26,000 light-years from Earth.

Gaia BH3's progenitor star was composed almost entirely of hydrogen and helium. Stars in the early universe had such a chemical compositio­n, known as low metallicit­y. This star had formed relatively early in the universe's history perhaps 2 billion years after the Big Bang event.

When that star exploded at the end of its lifespan called a supernova - it blasted some material into space while the remnant violently collapsed to form a black hole.

The discovery of Gaia BH3, according to Panuzzo, supports stellar evolution models showing that massive stellar black holes can be produced only by a low metallicit­y star like this one's progenitor star.

Gaia BH3's companion star, just as old as the other one was, is about 76% of the mass of the sun and a bit colder, but around 10 times more luminous. It orbits the black hole on an elliptical path at a distance varying between about 4.5 times the distance between Earth and the sun - a measure called an astronomic­al unit (AU) - and 29 AU. By way of comparison, Jupiter orbits around five AU from the sun and Neptune around 30 AU.

"The surprising result for me was the fact that the chemical compositio­n of this companion star does not show anything special, so it was not affected by the supernova explosion of the black hole," Observatoi­re

de Paris astronomer and study co-author Elisabetta Caffau said.

Scientists are not sure just how big stellar black holes can be.

"The maximum mass for a stellar black hole is a matter of active scientific debate," Panuzzo said.

 ?? ?? An artist's impression shows the orbits of the most massive stellar black hole in our galaxy, dubbed Gaia BH3, and a companion star, in this handout image obtained by Reuters on April 16, 2024.
An artist's impression shows the orbits of the most massive stellar black hole in our galaxy, dubbed Gaia BH3, and a companion star, in this handout image obtained by Reuters on April 16, 2024.

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