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Australian astronomers discover star with closest orbit to black hole

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2017-03-14 15:33Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping ECNS App Download
This graphic features an artist’s impression of a star found in the closest orbit known around a black hole.

This graphic features an artist's impression of a star found in the closest orbit known around a black hole.

Astronomers at Curtin University in Western Australia and the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research have discovered a star with the closest orbit to a black hole ever seen in our galaxy.

Located in the globular cluster 47 Tucanae, 14,800 light years away from earth in the Milky Way, the system named X9 fluctuates in brightness every 28 minutes, suggesting to scientists a star orbits a stellar companion which is most likely a black hole.

Although the binary couple have been known for decades, it's now believed the large amount of oxygen in the system supports the theory that the star is a white dwarf orbiting a black hole at a distance just 2.5 times, the earth from the moon.

"We actually don't think it's that rare," co-author from Curtin University, Vlad Tudor told Xinhua on Tuesday.

"What we think is it's just hard to see them because they're very faint to observe, but with radio telescopes we've just got to the level of technology where it's possible to observe the jets from these systems."

A possible explanation as to why the star is so close is that a red giant and a black hole collided causing gas from the star to eject, creating a binary between the newly formed white dwarf star and the black hole.

This process would then shrink the orbit of the binary with gravitational waves emitted, causing the black hole to pull in material from the white dwarf.

"This white dwarf is so close to the black hole that material is being pulled away from the star and dumped onto a disk of matter around the black hole before falling in," first author from the University of Alberta in Canada and Michigan State University in the United States Arash Bahramian said.

"Luckily for this star, we don't think it will follow this path into oblivion - it should stay in orbit."

 

  

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