|
Fig. 1:
This false colour image shows the galaxy M87. Optical light is shown in
white/blue (SDSS), the radio emission in yellow/orange (LOFAR). At the
centre, the radio emission has a very high surface brightness, showing
where the jet powered by the supermassive black hole is located.
Credits: Francesco de Gasperin, on behalf of the LOFAR collaboration
|
|
|
Fig. 2:
The LOFAR antenna array near Unterweilenbach is operated by the
MPA. It is one of the 6 stations in Germany and 40 stations in the
Netherlands that are combined to study the largely unexplored
frequency range between 10 and 240 MHz.
Image: Rainer Hassfurter/MPA
|
| |
Astronomers have produced one of the best images ever of such a
bubble, using LOFAR to detect frequencies from 20 to 160 MHz. "The
result is of great importance", says Francesco de Gasperin, lead
author of the study that will be published in the journal Astronomy &
Astrophysics. "It shows the enormous potential of LOFAR, and provides
compelling evidence of the close ties between black hole, host galaxy,
and their surroundings."
The image was made during the test-phase of LOFAR, and targeted the
giant elliptical galaxy Messier 87, at the centre of a galaxy cluster
in the constellation of Virgo. This galaxy is 2000 times more massive
than our Milky Way and hosts in its centre one of the most massive
black holes discovered so far, with a mass six billion times that of
our Sun. Every few minutes this black hole swallows an amount of
matter similar to that of the whole Earth, converting part of it into
radiation and a larger part into powerful jets of ultra-fast
particles, which are responsible for the observed radio emission.
“This is the first time such high-quality images are possible at
these low frequencies", says professor Heino Falcke, from Radboud
University, Nijmegen, and MPIfR Bonn, chairman of the board of the ILT
and co-author of the study. "This was a challenging observation - we
did not expect to get such fantastic results so early in the
commissioning phase of LOFAR."
To determine the age of the bubble, the authors added radio
observations at different frequencies from the Very Large Array in New
Mexico (USA), and the Effelsberg 100-meter radio telescope near Bonn
(Germany). The team found that this bubble is surprisingly young, just
about 40 million years, which is a mere instant on cosmic time
scales. The low frequency observation does not reveal any relic
emission outside the well-confined bubble boundaries, this means that
the bubble is not just a relic of an activity that happened long ago
but is constantly refilled with fresh particles ejected by the central
black hole.
"What is particularly fascinating", says Andrea Merloni from the
Max-Planck Institute of Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, who
supervised de Gasperin's doctoral work, "is that the results also
provide clues on the violent matter-to-energy conversion that occurs
very close to the black hole. In this case the black hole is
particularly efficient in accelerating the jet, and much less
effective in producing visible emission."
Francesco de Gasperin performed the study as part of his PhD work at
the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics and at the Excellence
Cluster Universe. De Gasperin is now a postdoctoral researcher at the
University of Hamburg.
Notes
LOFAR, designed and built by ASTRON, is a revolutionary instrument
able to detect radio waves with wavelenghts up to 30-meter. Radio
waves this long are typically generated by human activities as radio
broadcasts, radar signals or satellite communications. They are also
emitted by exotic objects in deep-space, such as accreting black
holes, rotating neutron stars and supernovae. To detect these waves,
LOFAR uses thousands of antennas spread all over Europe and combines
the signals in a supercomputer located in the Netherlands. The 100
Gigabit per second of data flowing from all antennas are analyzed
simultaneously and in real-time to provide the most detailed images
ever done at these frequencies.
International LOFAR Telescope operations are coordinated by ASTRON,
the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy, on behalf of a
consortium consisting of the Netherlands, Germany, France, the UK, and
Sweden. Many of the technological solutions developed for LOFAR, in
particular the calibration of phased-arrays as well as large-scale
data transport and processing, will be highly relevant for future
radio telescope projects such as the Square Kilometer Array (SKA).
Original publication:
F. de Gasperin, E. Orru', M. Murgia, A. Merloni, H. Falcke, et al.,
"M87 at metre wavelengths: the LOFAR picture",
published in A&A
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201220209
Contact:
Hannelore Hämmerle
Press Officer
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
and Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone: +49 89 30000-3980
E-Mail: hhaemmerlempa-garching.mpg.de
Dr. Francesco De Gasperin
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
Phone: +49 89 30000-2196
Universität Hamburg
Phone: +49 40 42838-8536
E-Mail: fdghs.uni-hamburg.de
|