Cygnus X-1

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Cygnus X-1
Location of Cygnus X-1 (circled)
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Cygnus
Right ascension 19h 58m 21.67574s[1]
Declination +35° 12′ 05.7845″[1]
Apparent magnitude (V) 8.95[2]
Characteristics
Spectral type O9.7Iab[2]
U−B color index −0.30[3]
B−V color index +0.81[3]
Variable type
Ellipsoidal variable
Distance
7,300 ± 200 ly
(2,250 ± 80 pc)
Absolute magnitude (MV)−6.5±0.2[4]
Details
Cygnus X-1
Mass21.2[5][6] M
Details
HDE 226868
Myr
HIP 98298, SAO 69181, V1357 Cyg.[2]
Database references
SIMBADdata

Cygnus X-1 (abbreviated Cyg X-1)

m2Hz) (2.3×103 jansky).[14][15] It remains among the most studied astronomical objects in its class. The compact object is now estimated to have a mass about 21.2 times the mass of the Sun[5][6] and has been shown to be too small to be any known kind of normal star or other likely object besides a black hole.[16] If so, the radius of its event horizon has 300 km "as upper bound to the linear dimension of the source region" of occasional X-ray bursts lasting only for about 1 ms.[17]

Cygnus X-1 belongs to a high-mass

relativistic jets, arranged perpendicularly to the disk, are carrying part of the energy of the infalling material away into interstellar space.[23]

This system may belong to a stellar association called Cygnus OB3, which would mean that Cygnus X-1 is about 5 million years old and formed from a progenitor star that had more than 40 solar masses. The majority of the star's mass was shed, most likely as a stellar wind. If this star had then exploded as a supernova, the resulting force would most likely have ejected the remnant from the system. Hence the star may have instead collapsed directly into a black hole.[10]

Cygnus X-1 was the subject of a friendly scientific wager between physicists Stephen Hawking and Kip Thorne in 1975, with Hawking hoping to lose.[24] Hawking bet that it was not a black hole. He conceded the bet in 1990 after observational data had strengthened the case that there was indeed a black hole in the system. As of 2004, this hypothesis lacked direct empirical evidence but was generally accepted based on indirect evidence.[25]

Discovery and observation

Observation of X-ray emissions allows

Å across an 8.4° section of the sky. These instruments swept across the sky as the rockets rotated, producing a map of closely spaced scans.[11]

As a result of these surveys, eight new sources of cosmic X-rays were discovered, including Cyg XR-1 (later Cyg X-1) in the constellation Cygnus. The

celestial coordinates of this source were estimated as right ascension 19h53m and declination 34.6°. It was not associated with any especially prominent radio or optical source at that position.[11]

Seeing a need for longer-duration studies, in 1963 Riccardo Giacconi and Herb Gursky proposed the first orbital satellite to study X-ray sources. NASA launched their Uhuru satellite in 1970,[28] which led to the discovery of 300 new X-ray sources.[29] Extended Uhuru observations of Cygnus X-1 showed fluctuations in the X-ray intensity that occurs several times a second.[30] This rapid variation meant that the X-ray generation must occur over a compact region no larger than ~105 km (roughly the size of Jupiter),[31] as the speed of light restricts communication between more distant regions.

In April–May 1971, Luc Braes and George K. Miley from Leiden Observatory, and independently Robert M. Hjellming and Campbell Wade at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory,[32] detected radio emission from Cygnus X-1, and their accurate radio position pinpointed the X-ray source to the star AGK2 +35 1910 = HDE 226868.[33][34] On the celestial sphere, this star lies about half a degree from the 4th-magnitude star Eta Cygni.[35] It is a supergiant star that is by itself incapable of emitting the observed quantities of X-rays. Hence, the star must have a companion that could heat gas to the millions of degrees needed to produce the radiation source for Cygnus X-1.

Doppler shift of the star's spectrum demonstrated the companion's presence and allowed its mass to be estimated from the orbital parameters.[38] Based on the high predicted mass of the object, they surmised that it may be a black hole, as the largest possible neutron star cannot exceed three times the mass of the Sun.[39]

With further observations strengthening the evidence, by the end of 1973 the astronomical community generally conceded that Cygnus X-1 was most likely a black hole.[40][41] More precise measurements of Cygnus X-1 demonstrated variability down to a single millisecond. This interval is consistent with turbulence in a disk of accreted matter surrounding a black hole—the accretion disk. X-ray bursts that last for about a third of a second match the expected time frame of matter falling toward a black hole.[42]

High-Energy Replicated Optics
(HERO) project

Cygnus X-1 has since been studied extensively using observations by orbiting and ground-based instruments.

active galaxies.[44]

Binary system

The

AU, or 20% of the distance from Earth to the Sun. The orbital eccentricity is thought to be only 0.018±0.002, meaning a nearly circular orbit.[46][47] Earth's distance to this system is calculated by trigonometric parallax as 1,860 ± 120 parsecs (6,070 ± 390 light-years),[48] and by radio astrometry as 2,220 ± 170 parsecs (7,240 ± 550 ly).[5]

A blue-band light curve for Cygnus X-1, adapted from Kemp et al. (1987)[49]

The HDE 226868/Cygnus X-1 system shares a common motion through space with an association of massive stars named Cygnus OB3, which is located at roughly 2000 parsecs from the Sun. This implies that HDE 226868, Cygnus X-1 and this OB association may have formed at the same time and location. If so, then the age of the system is about 5±1.5 million years. The motion of HDE 226868 with respect to Cygnus OB3 is 9±km/s, a typical value for random motion within a stellar association. HDE 226868 is about 60 parsecs from the center of the association and could have reached that separation in about 7±2 million years—which roughly agrees with estimated age of the association.[10]

With a

galactic longitude 71°,[2] this system lies inward along the same Orion Spur, in which the Sun is located within the Milky Way,[50] near where the spur approaches the Sagittarius Arm. Cygnus X-1 has been described as belonging to the Sagittarius Arm,[51]
though the structure of the Milky Way is not well established.

Compact object

From various techniques, the mass of the compact object appears to be greater than the maximum mass for a neutron star. Stellar evolutionary models suggest a mass of 20±5 solar masses,[7] while other techniques resulted in 10 solar masses. Measuring periodicities in the X-ray emission near the object yielded a more precise value of 14.8±1 solar masses. In all cases, the object is most likely a black hole[46][52]—a region of space with a gravitational field that is strong enough to prevent the escape of electromagnetic radiation from the interior. The boundary of this region is called the event horizon and has an effective radius called the Schwarzschild radius, which is about 44 km for Cygnus X-1. Anything (including matter and photons) that passes through this boundary is unable to escape.[53] New measurements published in 2021 yielded an estimated mass of 21.2±2.2 solar masses.[5][6]

Evidence of just such an event horizon may have been detected in 1992 using ultraviolet (UV) observations with the High Speed Photometer on the Hubble Space Telescope. As self-luminous clumps of matter spiral into a black hole, their radiation is emitted in a series of pulses that are subject to gravitational redshift as the material approaches the horizon. That is, the wavelengths of the radiation steadily increase, as predicted by general relativity. Matter hitting a solid, compact object would emit a final burst of energy, whereas material passing through an event horizon would not. Two such "dying pulse trains" were observed, which is consistent with the existence of a black hole.[54]

Chandra X-ray Observatory image of Cygnus X-1

The spin of the compact object is not yet well determined. Past analysis of data from the space-based Chandra X-ray Observatory suggested that Cygnus X-1 was not rotating to any significant degree.[55][56] However, evidence announced in 2011 suggests that it is rotating extremely rapidly, approximately 790 times per second.[57]

Formation

The largest star in the Cygnus OB3 association has a mass 40 times that of the Sun. As more massive stars evolve more rapidly, this implies that the progenitor star for Cygnus X-1 had more than 40 solar masses. Given the current estimated mass of the black hole, the progenitor star must have lost over 30 solar masses of material. Part of this mass may have been lost to HDE 226868, while the remainder was most likely expelled by a strong stellar wind. The helium enrichment of HDE 226868's outer atmosphere may be evidence for this mass transfer.[58] Possibly the progenitor may have evolved into a Wolf–Rayet star, which ejects a substantial proportion of its atmosphere using just such a powerful stellar wind.[10]

If the progenitor star had exploded as a supernova, then observations of similar objects show that the remnant would most likely have been ejected from the system at a relatively high velocity. As the object remained in orbit, this indicates that the progenitor may have collapsed directly into a black hole without exploding (or at most produced only a relatively modest explosion).[10]

Accretion disk

A Chandra X-ray spectrum of Cygnus X-1 showing a characteristic peak near 6.4 keV due to ionized iron in the accretion disk, but the peak is gravitationally red-shifted, broadened by the Doppler effect, and skewed toward lower energies[59]

The compact object is thought to be orbited by a thin, flat disk of accreting matter known as an accretion disk. This disk is intensely heated by friction between ionized gas in faster-moving inner orbits and that in slower outer ones. It is divided into a hot inner region with a relatively high level of ionization—forming a plasma—and a cooler, less ionized outer region that extends to an estimated 500 times the Schwarzschild radius,[22] or about 15,000 km.

Though highly and erratically variable, Cygnus X-1 is typically the brightest persistent source of

hard X-rays—those with energies from about 30 up to several hundred kiloelectronvolts—in the sky.[27] The X-rays are produced as lower-energy photons in the thin inner accretion disk, then given more energy through Compton scattering with very high-temperature electrons in a geometrically thicker, but nearly transparent corona enveloping it, as well as by some further reflection from the surface of the thin disk.[60] An alternative possibility is that the X-rays may be Compton-scattered by the base of a jet instead of a disk corona.[61]

The X-ray emission from Cygnus X-1 can vary in a somewhat repetitive pattern called

quasi-periodic oscillations (QPO). The mass of the compact object appears to determine the distance at which the surrounding plasma begins to emit these QPOs, with the emission radius decreasing as the mass decreases. This technique has been used to estimate the mass of Cygnus X-1, providing a cross-check with other mass derivations.[62]

Pulsations with a stable period, similar to those resulting from the spin of a neutron star, have never been seen from Cygnus X-1.[63][64] The pulsations from neutron stars are caused by the neutron star's rotating magnetic field, but the no-hair theorem guarantees that the magnetic field of a black hole is exactly aligned with its rotation axis and thus is static. For example, the X-ray binary V 0332+53 was thought to be a possible black hole until pulsations were found.[65] Cygnus X-1 has also never displayed X-ray bursts similar to those seen from neutron stars.[66] Cygnus X-1 unpredictably changes between two X-ray states, although the X-rays may vary continuously between those states as well. In the most common state, the X-rays are "hard", which means that more of the X-rays have high energy. In the less common state, the X-rays are "soft", with more of the X-rays having lower energy. The soft state also shows greater variability. The hard state is believed to originate in a corona surrounding the inner part of the more opaque accretion disk. The soft state occurs when the disk draws closer to the compact object (possibly as close as 150 km), accompanied by cooling or ejection of the corona. When a new corona is generated, Cygnus X-1 transitions back to the hard state.[67]

The spectral transition of Cygnus X-1 can be explained using a two-component advective flow solution, as proposed by Chakrabarti and Titarchuk.[68] A hard state is generated by the inverse Comptonisation of seed photons from the Keplarian disk and likewise synchrotron photons produced by the hot electrons in the centrifugal-pressure–supported boundary layer (CENBOL).[69]

The X-ray flux from Cygnus X-1 varies periodically every 5.6 days, especially during superior conjunction when the orbiting objects are most closely aligned with Earth and the compact source is the more distant. This indicates that the emissions are being partially blocked by circumstellar matter, which may be the stellar wind from the star HDE 226868. There is a roughly 300-day periodicity in the emission, which could be caused by the precession of the accretion disk.[70]

Jets

As accreted matter falls toward the compact object, it loses gravitational potential energy. Part of this released energy is dissipated by jets of particles, aligned perpendicular to the accretion disk, that flow outward with relativistic velocities (that is, the particles are moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light). This pair of jets provide a means for an accretion disk to shed excess energy and angular momentum. They may be created by magnetic fields within the gas that surrounds the compact object.[71]

The Cygnus X-1 jets are inefficient radiators and so release only a small proportion of their energy in the electromagnetic spectrum. That is, they appear "dark". The estimated angle of the jets to the line of sight is 30°, and they may be precessing.[67] One of the jets is colliding with a relatively dense part of the interstellar medium (ISM), forming an energized ring that can be detected by its radio emission. This collision appears to be forming a nebula that has been observed in the optical wavelengths. To produce this nebula, the jet must have an estimated average power of 4–14×1036 erg/s, or (9±5)×1029 W.[72] This is more than 1,000 times the power emitted by the Sun.[73] There is no corresponding ring in the opposite direction because that jet is facing a lower-density region of the ISM.[74]

In 2006, Cygnus X-1 became the first stellar-mass black hole found to display evidence of

gamma-ray emission in the very high-energy band, above 100 GeV. The signal was observed at the same time as a flare of hard X-rays, suggesting a link between the events. The X-ray flare may have been produced at the base of the jet, while the gamma rays could have been generated where the jet interacts with the stellar wind of HDE 226868.[75]

HDE 226868

An artist's impression of the HDE 226868–Cygnus X-1 binary system

HDE 226868 is a supergiant star with a

spectral class of O9.7 Iab,[2] which is on the borderline between class-O and class-B stars. It has an estimated surface temperature of 31,000 K[9] and mass approximately 20–40 times the mass of the Sun. Based on a stellar evolutionary model, at the estimated distance of 2,000 parsecs, this star may have a radius equal to about 15–17[46] times the solar radius and has approximately 300,000–400,000 times the luminosity of the Sun.[7][76] For comparison, the compact object is estimated to be orbiting HDE 226868 at a distance of about 40 solar radii, or twice the radius of this star.[77]

The surface of HDE 226868 is being tidally distorted by the gravity of the massive companion, forming a tear-drop shape that is further distorted by rotation. This causes the optical brightness of the star to vary by 0.06 magnitudes during each 5.6-day binary orbit, with the minimum magnitude occurring when the system is aligned with the line of sight.[78] The "ellipsoidal" pattern of light variation results from the limb darkening and gravity darkening of the star's surface.[79]

When the spectrum of HDE 226868 is compared to the similar star

hydrogen-alpha spectral lines of HDE 226868 show profiles similar to the star P Cygni, which indicates that the star is surrounded by a gaseous envelope that is being accelerated away from the star at speeds of about 1,500 km/s.[81][82]

Like other stars of its spectral type, HDE 226868 is thought to be shedding mass in a stellar wind at an estimated rate of 2.5×10−6 solar masses per year; or one solar mass every 400,000 years.[83] The gravitational influence of the compact object appears to be reshaping this stellar wind, producing a focused wind geometry rather than a spherically symmetrical wind.[77] X-rays from the region surrounding the compact object heat and ionize this stellar wind. As the object moves through different regions of the stellar wind during its 5.6-day orbit, the UV lines,[84] the radio emission,[85] and the X-rays themselves all vary.[86]

The Roche lobe of HDE 226868 defines the region of space around the star where orbiting material remains gravitationally bound. Material that passes beyond this lobe may fall toward the orbiting companion. This Roche lobe is believed to be close to the surface of HDE 226868 but not overflowing, so the material at the stellar surface is not being stripped away by its companion. However, a significant proportion of the stellar wind emitted by the star is being drawn onto the compact object's accretion disk after passing beyond this lobe.[20]

The gas and dust between the Sun and HDE 226868 results in a reduction in the apparent magnitude of the star, as well as a reddening of the hue—red light can more effectively penetrate the dust in the interstellar medium. The estimated value of the interstellar extinction (AV) is 3.3 magnitudes.[87] Without the intervening matter, HDE 226868 would be a fifth-magnitude star,[88] and thus visible to the unaided eye.[89]

Stephen Hawking and Kip Thorne

NASA's "Galaxy of Horrors" poster for Cygnus X-1[90]

Cygnus X-1 was the subject of a bet between physicists Stephen Hawking and Kip Thorne, in which Hawking bet against the existence of black holes in the region. Hawking later described this as an "insurance policy" of sorts. In his book A Brief History of Time he wrote:[91]

This was a form of insurance policy for me. I have done a lot of work on black holes, and it would all be wasted if it turned out that black holes do not exist. But in that case, I would have the consolation of winning my bet, which would win me four years of the magazine Private Eye. If black holes do exist, Kip will get one year of Penthouse. When we made the bet in 1975, we were 80% certain that Cygnus X-1 was a black hole. By now [1988], I would say that we are about 95% certain, but the bet has yet to be settled.

According to the updated tenth-anniversary edition of A Brief History of Time, Hawking has conceded the bet

Nova on PBS.[95]

In popular culture

Cygnus X-1 is the subject of a two-part song series by Canadian progressive rock band Rush. The first part, "Book I: The Voyage", is the last song on the 1977 album A Farewell to Kings. The second part, "Book II: Hemispheres", is the first song on the following 1978 album, Hemispheres. The lyrics describe an explorer aboard the spaceship Rocinante, who travels to the black hole, believing that there may be something beyond it. As he moves closer, it becomes increasingly difficult to control the ship, and he is eventually drawn in by the pull of gravity.[96]

In the 1979 Disney live-action science fiction film

The Black Hole, the scientific survey ship captained by Dr. Hans Reinhardt to study the black hole of the film's title is the Cygnus, presumably (although never stated as such) named for the first-identified black hole, Cygnus X-1.[97]

See also

References

  1. ^
    S2CID 244398875
    . Gaia DR3 record for this source at VizieR.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g V* V1357 Cyg – High Mass X-ray Binary, Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg, March 3, 2003, retrieved 2008-03-03
  3. ^
  4. on 2017-09-22, retrieved 2018-11-04
  5. ^ . Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  6. ^ a b c Overbye, Dennis (18 February 2021). "A Famous Black Hole Gets a Massive Update – Cygnus X-1, one of the first identified black holes, is much weightier than expected, raising new questions about how such objects form". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  7. ^
    S2CID 119334761
    Note: for radius and luminosity, see Table 1 with d=2 kpc.
  8. ^ a b Integral's view of Cygnus X-1, ESA, June 10, 2003, retrieved 2008-03-20
  9. ^
    S2CID 45544180
  10. ^
  11. ^ Observations: Seeing in X-ray wavelengths, ESA, 2004-11-05, retrieved 2008-08-12
  12. ^ Glister, Paul (2011), "Cygnus X-1: A Black Hole Confirmed." Centauri Dreams: Imagining and Planning Interstellar Exploration, 2011-11-29. Accessed 2016-09-16.
  13. ^ "2010 X-Ray Sources", The Astronomical Almanac, U.S. Naval Observatory, archived from the original on 2010-03-28, retrieved 2009-08-04 gives a range of 235–1320 μJy at energies of 2–10 kEv, where a Jansky (Jy) is 10−26 Wm−2 Hz−1.
  14. .
  15. ^ Harko, T. (June 28, 2006), Black Holes, University of Hong Kong, archived from the original on February 10, 2009, retrieved 2008-03-28
  16. S2CID 231951746
    .
  17. .
  18. ^
  19. ^
  20. ^ "Inside Einstein's Mind". Nova. Season 42. Episode 23. 25 Nov 2015. Event occurs at 43:54. PBS. Kip Thorne: Stephen Hawking had a terribly deep investment in it actually being a black hole, and so he made the bet against himself as an insurance policy, so at least he would get something out of it, if Cygnus X-1 turned out not to be a black hole.
  21. ^ Galaxy Entree or Main Course?, Swinburne University, February 27, 2004, retrieved 2008-03-31
  22. ^
  23. ^ The Uhuru Satellite, NASA, June 26, 2003, retrieved 2008-05-09
  24. ^ Giacconi, Riccardo (December 8, 2002), The Dawn of X-Ray Astronomy, The Nobel Foundation, retrieved 2008-03-24
  25. ^ This is the distance light can travel in a third of a second.
  26. , Eta Cygni is 25 arc minutes to the west-south-west of this star.
  27. ^ Rolston, Bruce (November 10, 1997), The First Black Hole, University of Toronto, archived from the original on March 7, 2008, retrieved 2008-03-11
  28. ^ Brainerd, Jim (July 20, 2005), X-rays from AGNs, The Astrophysics Spectator, retrieved 2008-03-24
  29. ^
  30. . Retrieved 27 December 2021.
  31. ^ Goebel, Greg, 7.0 The Milky Way Galaxy, In The Public Domain, archived from the original on 2008-06-12, retrieved 2008-06-29
  32. ^ Strohmayer, Tod; Shaposhnikov, Nikolai; Schartel, Norbert (May 16, 2007), New technique for 'weighing' black holes, ESA, retrieved 2008-03-10
  33. ^ Scientists find black hole's 'point of no return', Massachusetts Institute of Technology, January 9, 2006, archived from the original on 13 January 2006, retrieved 2008-03-28
  34. S2CID 119336501{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
    )
  35. , retrieved 2008-03-11
  36. ^ More Images of Cygnus X-1, XTE J1650-500 & GX 339-4, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics/Chandra X-ray Center, August 30, 2006, retrieved 2008-03-30
  37. ^
  38. .
  39. .
  40. ^
  41. ^ Interstellar Reddening, Swinburne University of Technology, retrieved 2006-08-10
  42. ^ Kaler, Jim, Cygnus X-1, University of Illinois, retrieved 2008-03-19
  43. ^ "Devoured by Gravity". NASA. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  44. ^ Vaughan, Simon. "Hawking Thorne wager". University of Leicester. Archived from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  45. ^ "Black Hole Apocalypse". PBS.org. 10 January 2018. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  46. ^ Rush and Philosophy: Heart and Mind United. Open Court. 2011. p. 196.
  47. ^ Hogan, David J. Science Fiction America: Essays on SF Cinema. McFarland. p. 231.

External links

Records
Preceded by
None
Cyg X-1 is the first black hole discovered
Least distant black hole

1972—1986
Succeeded by
V616 Monocerotis