一颗恒星似乎直接坍缩成黑洞,没有发生超新星爆发。
A star appears to have collapsed straight into a black hole without supernova (2017)

原始链接: https://science.nasa.gov/missions/hubble/collapsing-star-gives-birth-to-a-black-hole/

天文学家观测到一颗质量是太阳25倍的巨大恒星神秘消失,并未发生预期的超新星爆发,很可能直接坍缩成黑洞。这一由大型双筒望远镜、哈勃太空望远镜和斯皮策太空望远镜观测到的“未遂超新星”事件,挑战了人们对黑洞形成的传统理解。 俄亥俄州立大学的研究人员确定这颗名为N6946-BH1的恒星消失了,而不是爆炸。这表明多达30%的大质量恒星可能直接坍缩成黑洞,解释了超新星预测数量和观测数量之间的差异。Scott Adams根据他们七年的调查结果估计,未遂超新星的可能性为10%-30%。 Krzysztof Stanek强调了这对LIGO探测到的巨大黑洞起源的意义。与会损失质量的超新星过程相比,直接坍缩可能是形成这些大型黑洞更有效途径。这项由美国国家科学基金会、美国宇航局和欧洲航天局支持的发现,为恒星演化和黑洞形成提供了新的视角。

一篇 Hacker News 的帖子讨论了 NASA 关于一颗恒星似乎直接坍缩成黑洞而没有发生超新星爆发的一篇文章。 用户 roman_soldier 开玩笑地建议,一个先进的文明可能正在抽取这颗恒星的能量。 用户 bell-cot 回忆说,在某些恒星质量和金属丰度条件下,直接坍缩是预期的,并询问是否有天体物理学家可以证实这一点。 metalman,并非天体物理学家,质疑一颗恒星如何能够突然停止发光从而导致完美的引力坍缩。他们推测这颗恒星需要很大,富含金属,并且没有明显的附近气体或伴星。他们还指出,恒星和星系的变异性比以前预测的要大,而一颗恒星整齐消失的想法很奇怪。帖子还包含了 AI 初创公司学校的广告。

原文

Massive Star Goes Out With a Whimper Instead of a Bang (Artist's Illustration) This illustration shows the final stages in the life of a supermassive star that fails to explode as a supernova but instead implodes under gravity to form a black hole. From left to right: the...

NASA, ESA, and P. Jeffries (STScI)

Astronomers have watched as a massive, dying star was likely reborn as a black hole. It took the combined power of the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), and NASA's Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes to go looking for remnants of the vanquished star, only to find that it disappeared out of sight.

It went out with a whimper instead of a bang.

The star, which was 25 times as massive as our sun, should have exploded in a very bright supernova. Instead, it fizzled out—and then left behind a black hole.

A team of astronomers at The Ohio State University watched a star disappear and possibly become a black hole. Instead of becoming a black hole through the expected process of a supernova, the black hole candidate formed through a "failed supernova." - Download video in HD formats from NASA Goddard's Scientific Visualization Studio.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Katrina Jackson

"Massive fails" like this one in a nearby galaxy could explain why astronomers rarely see supernovae from the most massive stars, said Christopher Kochanek, professor of astronomy at The Ohio State University and the Ohio Eminent Scholar in Observational Cosmology.

As many as 30 percent of such stars, it seems, may quietly collapse into black holes — no supernova required.

"The typical view is that a star can form a black hole only after it goes supernova," Kochanek explained. "If a star can fall short of a supernova and still make a black hole, that would help to explain why we don’t see supernovae from the most massive stars."

All the tests came up negative. The star was no longer there. By a careful process of elimination, the researchers eventually concluded that the star must have become a black hole.

It's too early in the project to know for sure how often stars experience massive fails, but Scott Adams, a former Ohio State student who recently earned his doctorate doing this work, was able to make a preliminary estimate.

"N6946-BH1 is the only likely failed supernova that we found in the first seven years of our survey. During this period, six normal supernovae have occurred within the galaxies we've been monitoring, suggesting that 10 to 30 percent of massive stars die as failed supernovae," he said.

"This is just the fraction that would explain the very problem that motivated us to start the survey, that is, that there are fewer observed supernovae than should be occurring if all massive stars die that way."

To study co-author Krzysztof Stanek, the really interesting part of the discovery is the implications it holds for the origins of very massive black holes — the kind that the LIGO experiment detected via gravitational waves. (LIGO is the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.)

It doesn't necessarily make sense, said Stanek, professor of astronomy at Ohio State, that a massive star could undergo a supernova — a process which entails blowing off much of its outer layers — and still have enough mass left over to form a massive black hole on the scale of those that LIGO detected.

"I suspect it's much easier to make a very massive black hole if there is no supernova," he concluded.

Adams is now an astrophysicist at Caltech. Other co-authors were Ohio State doctoral student Jill Gerke and University of Oklahoma astronomer Xinyu Dai. Their research was supported by the National Science Foundation.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, manages the Spitzer Space Telescope mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. Science operations are conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at Caltech in Pasadena, California. Spacecraft operations are based at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, Littleton, Colorado. Data are archived at the Infrared Science Archive housed at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at Caltech. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.

The Large Binocular Telescope is an international collaboration among institutions in the United Sates, Italy and Germany.

The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., in Washington, D.C.

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