Images by Date
Images by Category
Solar System
Stars
Exoplanets
White Dwarfs
Supernovas
Neutron Stars
Black Holes
Milky Way Galaxy
Normal Galaxies
Quasars
Galaxy Clusters
Cosmology/Deep Field
Miscellaneous
Images by Interest
Space Scoop for Kids
4K JPG
Multiwavelength
Sky Map
Constellations
Photo Blog
Top Rated Images
Image Handouts
Desktops
Fits Files
Visual descriptions
Image Tutorials
Photo Album Tutorial
False Color
Cosmic Distance
Look-Back Time
Scale & Distance
Angular Measurement
Images & Processing
AVM/Metadata
Image Use Policy
Web Shortcuts
Chandra Blog
RSS Feed
Chronicle
Email Newsletter
News & Noteworthy
Image Use Policy
Questions & Answers
Glossary of Terms
Download Guide
Get Adobe Reader
M82X-2: Suspected Black Hole Unmasked as Ultraluminous Pulsar
M82X-2
M82X-2

  • The brightest pulsar ever recorded has been discovered in the M82 galaxy.

  • This object is an "ultraluminous X-ray source" (ULX), a class of objects that astronomers previously thought contained a stellar-mass black hole or neutron star.

  • NuSTAR, a high-energy X-ray telescope, detected unusual pulsations in the ULX.

  • Astronomers used Chandra to identify exactly which X-ray source was emitting the pulsations and other unusual behavior.

An Ultraluminous X-ray Source (ULX) that astronomers had thought was a black hole is really the brightest pulsar ever recorded. ULXs are objects that produce more X-rays than most "normal" X-ray binary systems, in which a star is orbiting a neutron star or a stellar-mass black hole. Black holes in these X-ray binary systems generally weigh about five to thirty times the mass of the sun.

Astronomers used NASA's NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array) and Chandra X-ray Observatory to study two ULXs in the center of M82, a galaxy located just over 11 million light years from Earth. This composite image shows X-rays from NuSTAR (purple) and Chandra (blue) that have been combined with optical data from the NOAO 2.1 meter telescope (gold). The extended X-ray emission is unrelated to the two ULXs.

Until now, astronomers have thought that matter falling onto black holes powered the bright X-ray emission in all ULXs. Most of the black holes in ULXs are thought to weigh at least 10 to 50 times the mass of the Sun, but some of the brightest ULXs are thought to weigh 100 times the Sun's mass, or more.

The new X-ray data provide a critical clue to the nature of one of the ULXs in M82. Using NuSTAR, scientists have discovered regular variations, or "pulsations," in the object known as M82X-2. This object pulses once on average every 1.37 seconds, and pulsations change in a regular pattern with a period of 2.5 days.

These types of pulsations are not seen with black holes. Rather, they are the signatures of so-called pulsars, rapidly rotating neutron stars. The apparent shifts in the pulsation period are due to the motion of the star in its orbit. Assuming that the pulsar weighs 1.4 times the mass of the Sun (the common size of a pulsar or neutron star), the data imply that the companion star's mass is at least 5.2 times the mass of the Sun.

This discovery is significant because it may mean that pulsars make up a significant part of the ULX population. Chandra had observed M82X-2 before but these pulsations were not found until observations were made by NuSTAR, a high-energy X-ray mission that was launched in 2012. While NuSTAR detected the pulsations, Chandra, with its excellent spatial resolution, was needed to resolve M82X-2 from the other nearby ULX and rule out the contributions from other possible sources unresolved by NuSTAR. Although Chandra did not detect pulsations from M82X-2, scientists determined which source was responsible for the pulsations seen by NuSTAR by comparing the Chandra and NuSTAR images.

In addition to the pulsations, the overall brightness in X-rays of M82X-2 is variable over timescales lasting weeks and months. At its brightest it is more than ten times brighter than any known pulsar that is powered by accretion of material from a companion star. It is so bright that generally astronomers thought that only 50 to 100 solar mass black holes could explain such a bright ULX.

The latest study of M82X-2 provides new challenges for theorists to develop models explaining how a pulsar can pull matter inward and produce such copious X-rays. When matter is pulled toward a dense, compact object, like a pulsar, neutron star, or black hole, it is heated and produces X-rays. These X-rays create a radiation pressure that pushes out on the matter. For sustained infall of matter, the radiation pressure of the X-rays should be less than the pull of the compact object's gravity.

The X-ray luminosity of M82X-2 reaches about 100 times brighter than the threshold where the outward pressure from radiation balances the inward pull of gravity of the pulsar, the so-called Eddington limit. Possible explanations for violations of the Eddington limit include geometrical effects arising from the funneling of infalling material along magnetic field lines.

The authors of the study that appears in the journal Nature are Matteo Bachetti (University of Toulouse, France), Fiona Harrison (California Institute of Technology), Dominic Walton (Cal Tech), Brian Grefenstrette (Cal Tech), Deepto Chakrabarty (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Felix Fuerst (Cal Tech), Didier Barret (Toulouse), Andrei Beloborodov (Columbia University), Steven Boggs (University of California, Berkeley), Finn Erland Christensen (Technical University of Denmark), William Craig (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Andy Fabian (University of Cambridge), Charles Hailey (Columbia University), Ann Hornschemeier (Goddard Space Flight Center), Shri Kulkarni (MIT), Tom Maccarone (Texas Tech University), Jon M. Miller (University of Michigan), Vikram Rana (Cal Tech), Daniel Stern (Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Shriharsh Tendulkar (Cal Tech), John Tomsick (University of California, Berkeley), Natalie Webb (Toulouse), and William Zhang (GSFC).

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, DC. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, controls Chandra's science and flight operations.

Fast Facts for M82X-2:
Credit  X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ. of Toulouse/M.Bachetti et al, Optical: NOAO/AURA/NSF
Release Date  October 8, 2014
Scale  Image is 10 arcmin (33,000 light years)
Category  Normal Galaxies & Starburst Galaxies, Black Holes
Coordinates (J2000)  RA 09h 55m 50.70s | Dec +69° 40´ 37.00"
Constellation  Ursa Major
Observation Date  22 pointings from 20 Sep 1999 to 03 Feb 2014
Observation Time  228 hours 26 min (9 days, 12 hours, 26 min).
Obs. ID  361, 378-380, 1302, 2933, 5644, 6097, 6361, 8190, 10025-10027, 10542-10545, 10925, 11104, 11800, 13796, 15616
Instrument  ACIS
Color Code  X-ray (Magenta, Cyan); Optical (Red, Green, Blue)
Optical
X-ray
Distance Estimate  About 12 million light years
distance arrow
Visitor Comments (5)

How you can estimate the map of local super cluster while you can not see this cluster or any original picture?
and how you can imagine the map of Local super cluster?

Posted by Wajhe-ul-hussnain Abidi on Friday, 04.24.15 @ 16:01pm


I love the pictures.

Posted by Ryan on Thursday, 11.6.14 @ 13:12pm


Howdy... Hello... Once again Chandra shows the excellence of essence. Great Teamwork.

Posted by J.J.Madson II on Wednesday, 10.22.14 @ 19:41pm


This is a highly impressive change in discovery and opens up so much more research to be done.

Posted by micheal R wylie on Wednesday, 10.15.14 @ 15:53pm


I recently read that the estimated number of galaxies in our observable universe had increased to around 1 trillion. Does this discovery alter that estimate?

Posted by doug on Monday, 10.13.14 @ 18:51pm


Rate This Image

Rating: 3.8/5
(892 votes cast)
Download & Share

Desktops

1024x768 - 634.5 kb
1280x1024 - 935.1 kb
1680x1050 - 1.1 MB
More Information
Blog: M82X-2
More Images
X-ray Image of M82X-2
Jpg, Tif
X-ray

More Images
Animation & Video
Tour of M82X-2
animation

More Animations
Related Images
SN2014J
SN 2014J
(27 Jan 14)

SN 1970G
SN 1970G
(29 Nov 05)

Related Information
Related Podcast
Top Rated Images
NGC 602

Data Sonification

30 Doradus B




FaceBookTwitterYouTubeFlickr