Dubai Telegraph - First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team

EUR -
AED 4.327108
AFN 75.40719
ALL 95.469537
AMD 434.725041
ANG 2.108923
AOA 1081.629064
ARS 1650.727597
AUD 1.623956
AWG 2.123787
AZN 1.999297
BAM 1.958219
BBD 2.373352
BDT 144.848906
BGN 1.965433
BHD 0.444753
BIF 3507.596044
BMD 1.178245
BND 1.49628
BOB 8.142056
BRL 5.793314
BSD 1.178375
BTN 112.252074
BWP 15.843703
BYN 3.295298
BYR 23093.607434
BZD 2.369957
CAD 1.610379
CDF 2668.725934
CHF 0.915662
CLF 0.02668
CLP 1050.048955
CNY 8.012951
CNH 8.001941
COP 4426.585029
CRC 540.071638
CUC 1.178245
CUP 31.2235
CVE 110.355877
CZK 24.335949
DJF 209.842743
DKK 7.473127
DOP 69.766763
DZD 155.830536
EGP 62.116854
ERN 17.673679
ETB 183.994217
FJD 2.571521
FKP 0.864175
GBP 0.863712
GEL 3.151798
GGP 0.864175
GHS 13.303544
GIP 0.864175
GMD 86.595675
GNF 10339.902681
GTQ 8.99333
GYD 246.466508
HKD 9.224035
HNL 31.332966
HRK 7.534409
HTG 154.223758
HUF 355.640351
IDR 20525.504027
ILS 3.419091
IMP 0.864175
INR 112.28689
IQD 1543.726344
IRR 1545268.680998
ISK 143.781277
JEP 0.864175
JMD 185.901189
JOD 0.83536
JPY 184.998636
KES 152.169713
KGS 103.03766
KHR 4727.839461
KMF 492.506219
KPW 1060.420699
KRW 1732.75698
KWD 0.362782
KYD 0.982021
KZT 545.938935
LAK 25850.147493
LBP 105523.730332
LKR 379.572039
LRD 215.649098
LSL 19.367285
LTL 3.479052
LVL 0.712709
LYD 7.453332
MAD 10.74397
MDL 20.197117
MGA 4899.092559
MKD 61.651293
MMK 2473.757107
MNT 4214.238473
MOP 9.502858
MRU 47.052515
MUR 55.059614
MVR 18.140327
MWK 2043.341119
MXN 20.233818
MYR 4.621669
MZN 75.301835
NAD 19.367285
NGN 1608.469828
NIO 43.365402
NOK 10.818336
NPR 179.602355
NZD 1.975352
OMR 0.453022
PAB 1.178355
PEN 4.0483
PGK 5.118409
PHP 71.976664
PKR 328.269425
PLN 4.238932
PYG 7242.915151
QAR 4.305546
RON 5.209374
RSD 117.398042
RUB 86.718484
RWF 1723.343166
SAR 4.42052
SBD 9.448858
SCR 16.485242
SDG 707.533214
SEK 10.85829
SGD 1.494239
SHP 0.879679
SLE 29.043548
SLL 24707.209823
SOS 673.437493
SRD 44.070499
STD 24387.298371
STN 24.530715
SVC 10.310866
SYP 130.252583
SZL 19.361242
THB 38.019607
TJS 11.029663
TMT 4.123858
TND 3.418944
TOP 2.836932
TRY 53.464883
TTD 7.987934
TWD 36.970039
TZS 3078.17328
UAH 51.786803
UGX 4430.509825
USD 1.178245
UYU 46.978687
UZS 14307.854103
VES 588.222424
VND 31017.306923
VUV 139.713719
WST 3.189624
XAF 656.77377
XAG 0.013838
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.184266
XCG 2.12375
XDR 0.816816
XOF 656.779351
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.158781
ZAR 19.283646
ZMK 10605.622741
ZMW 22.279802
ZWL 379.394499
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.11

    0%

  • BCE

    0.2950

    24.435

    +1.21%

  • RELX

    -0.3250

    33.255

    -0.98%

  • NGG

    0.7100

    87.6

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    -0.0147

    13.135

    -0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    63.18

    +0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    50.08

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    2.8500

    108.23

    +2.63%

  • BCC

    -0.1750

    70.495

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0661

    23.5998

    +0.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.4300

    16.8

    +2.56%

  • AZN

    0.4100

    183.26

    +0.22%

  • BP

    0.8850

    44.225

    +2%

  • VOD

    0.1850

    16.385

    +1.13%

  • BTI

    2.0000

    60.28

    +3.32%

First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team
First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team / Photo: - - European Southern Observatory/AFP/File

First 'dormant' stellar black hole discovered by debunking team

A team of astrophysicists known for debunking previous supposed black holes announced a discovery of their own on Monday: the first "dormant" stellar-mass black hole spotted orbiting a star in a nearby galaxy.

Text size:

While these black holes are thought to be common throughout the universe, they have proved difficult to find, and they have themselves rejected several possible candidates in recent years.

Now the international team has found a "needle in a haystack," said Tomer Shenar, an astrophysicist at the University of Amsterdam and lead author of a new study in the Nature Astronomy journal.

The team was searching the skies for something that could eventually become a binary black hole, in which two black holes orbit each other after swallowing their stars in a supernovae explosion.

"We found a quite massive star, that weighs 25 times the mass of our Sun, that is orbiting around something that we do not see," Shenar told AFP.

They believe the blue star, which is in the Large Magellanic Cloud galaxy that neighbours our Milky Way, is locked in a death dance with a black hole that has nine times the mass of our Sun.

These kinds of black holes are normally detected by the X-ray radiation they emit as they collect material from their companion star.

But this binary system, known as VFTS 243, is called dormant because it does not emit X-rays -- it is not close enough to suck matter from its star.

- 'Black hole destroyer' -

Hugues Sana, astrophysicist at the KU Leuven University in Belgium, said the Milky Way alone is thought to have around 100 million stellar-mass black holes, which are far smaller than their supermassive big brothers.

However only 10 have been found, said Sana, a co-author of the study.

This could be because many are laying dormant, biding their time to eventually swallow their companion star.

Sana said observing them was like watching two people dance in a dark room, one dressed in white and the other in black. You might only see one dancer, but you know the other one is there.

"We've never really detected such systems before," Shenar told AFP. "There have been a few claims in the last years, but they have all more or less been refuted," Shenar told AFP.

Indeed, members of his team were among those rejecting previous discoveries, by laying out alternatives for what the data could indicate.

Because of this, Shenar said they expected extra scrutiny.

So they went about meticulously eliminating all the other possibilities, Shenar said, until they were satisfied that "it's either a fat, invisible alien -- or a black hole".

Then they called the most famous black hole debunker they knew.

Kareem El-Badry of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has been "debunking black holes one after another" over the last couple of years, Tomer said, dubbing him the "black hole destroyer".

"I sent him the data and I told him, listen, we found this object -- prove me wrong," Tomer said.

"I had my doubts," said El-Badry, who joined the team and ran his own simulations.

"But I could not find a plausible explanation for the data that did not involve a black hole."

- Not with a bang, but a whimper -

The discovery could also give an insight into how black holes are formed.

Stellar-mass black holes are believed to be born during the death of a large star, in a massive supernovae explosion.

The force of the blast knocks black holes in a binary system into an elliptical, rather than circular orbit.

However, VFTS 243 has an orbit that is also perfectly circular.

"That means that the star immediately vanished into the black hole," Shenar said.

"This has a lot of implications as to how these black hole pairs form," he said, adding that VFTS 243's star could eventually collapse in a similar way.

Andrew Norton, an astrophysicist at Britain's Open University who was not involved in the study, said "this is important evidence that all such stars may not end their lives in supernovae explosions".

Shenar said he welcomed other scientists trying to debunk the debunkers.

"If someone comes and debunks this as well, I'm sure they will have a pretty fantastic explanation -- like the fat alien."

I.El-Hammady--DT