today the talk will be about astrophysics and in particular the
monsters of the universe the speaker will be Julie lava check Lauren dough
normally we're very proud that we gather scientists from slack to slack from all
over the world but in her case things had to be gathered from all over the world just so that she could be born she
is the child of immigrants from two very different places who came to Montreal she was educated in the french-canadian
system went to Cambridge did a brilliant thesis there on the structure of some
active galaxies came here to Chi pack the astrophysics Institute of slack and
Stanford on an Einstein fellowship and she's been working with people here on
x-ray observations of the biggest and most ferocious things in the universe
and that's what she'll talk to you about tonight so let's welcome joy
okay can everybody hear me yes right okay so hi everyone I'm really happy to
be here and so today I'm going to be talking about the most powerful and
mysterious objects in the universe okay and it's because of their power that I call them monsters and so
basically what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna tell you I'm not gonna tell you exactly
what these monsters are yet okay instead let's pretend for now that they're
basically dragons okay and instead what I'm gonna do is I'm going to tell you a very interesting story about a very
special object one of these monsters and what we'll do is we'll go through the
steps that astronomers did that kids took decades ago when they discovered this object and we'll piece together all
the clues and finally we'll come to the conclusion to see what these kinds of monsters are actually okay and so to
start off basically we're gonna go on a small journey okay what we're gonna do is we're gonna take our telescope so any
kind of telescope that we want and we're gonna point into a very particular region in the sky okay so not just any
one but one in particular and this region is called a Cygnus constellation
okay so this is where our story takes us so this constellation is quite a
well-known constellation in the northern sky so we can actually see it from here and it's based so it's a lot of these
stars that come together so the constellation is traced out by these green lines here what's interesting is
perhaps there's this very bright star here which happens to be the nineteenth brightest star in the sky so quite
bright but this is not where we're gonna focus our attention to what we're gonna do is we're gonna focus our attention
here on this particular star called Etta signe okay and what's actually
interesting is that we're gonna zoom in and this part of the sky so let's do this right now okay if you have a very
nice telescope this is the kind of image that you'll see of this region of the sky and as you see it's a very beautiful
image it's made up essentially of a lot of stars you have a lot of activity
going on a lot of newly formed stars that are happening but there's actually something very
different that's going on in this region of the sky and what's different is based on a discovery that was made in the
1960s what happened in the 1960s was that astronomers launched rockets that
for the first time observed the universe in x-rays okay and they didn't know what
they were really gonna see but they found that in this region there had to happen to be a very very bright x-ray
source and this source was named Cygnus x1 because it was in the Cygnus
constellation and it was the first x-ray source discovered there now what I'm going to do is I'm going to show you
where the sources so the x-ray emission isn't actually coming from all over this region here it's only coming from one
very very tiny region from here okay so where this red little square is it's
coming from this very tiny region and just to give you an idea of what we're looking at this is what we would see in
the x-rays okay this as I said already this is one of the brightest x-ray
sources in the sky now the problem with this is that took for an object to emit
x-rays it takes a very particular kind of situation so not all objects actually do this only a very small percentage of
them do and to be able to emit x-rays you basically need the object to be extremely hot okay how hot I'm gonna
explain this maybe in a bit easier way yes so this is a very typical
explanation for what's happening so basically what you do is you take your oven or stove top and when you turn it
on so initially it's black but as soon as you turn it on it gets heated up and then it starts to glow okay it starts to
glow red and what's happening is that objects basically are gonna emit a certain kind of light depending on their
temperature all right and just to give you a better understanding this is basically what happens so depending on
the temperature of the object you get different kind of light that it's that it's emitted by the object so what
happens here in the case of our stovetop as it goes up to about 400 degrees Fahrenheit it's mostly going to emit
emission in what we call the infrared so we're going to get a lot of light in the infrared but some of
is actually going to go all the way up to the visible into the red portion here and so our eyes are actually not very
sensitive and they can only catch a glimpse of what's happening so our eyes are only can only see what's happening
in the visible however we can use telescopes to try and probe these different regions here so radio infrared
up to x-rays and so I'm gonna focus today on this part here so on the x-rays
basically what this is telling you is that for an object to actually emit x-rays you need it to be extremely hot
so we're talking about several millions of degrees Fahrenheit so very very hot
so whenever you look at something in the sky that's emitting x-rays it's basically telling you that something
very hot something very energetic is happening in that particular region and so coming back to our object before this basically
what we do is we use these telescopes and so I'm going to talk about this telescope here and so coming back to our
object so basically it emits a lot of x-rays so what's happening what's making
it so hot that it's actually doing this and recalling that this is one of the brightest sources in the sky so it has
to be extremely energetic in this region and all of it is coming from this very tiny square here and so what astronomers
did was when they figured out that most of this x-ray emission was coming from this little square they said okay let's
try and see what's actually there is there an object is there for example a supernova remnant and so the reason why
they thought about supernova remnants was that at that time they knew that supernova remnants actually emitted
x-rays and so supernova remnants are basically what's left over once a very massive star has exploded and so you see
these beautiful supernovas and so they said maybe that's what's happening here maybe that's what is emitting all of the
other x-rays so they looked for one and they didn't find one okay what they
found instead was a very massive star okay so this is a part of a diagram that
was taken from the original paper so these were one of the discovery papers back in the 1970s that found this
massive star to be associated with this x-ray emission and so they derive the masses of the
stars so we're basically talking about a very massive so essentially between 15
to 30 times the mass of our Sun so a very massive star however the problem is
that astronomers knew at this time that when you looked at other stars that had
the same kind of mass they didn't admit that much x-rays okay they only they emitted about 1000 times less than what
we were seeing so something else something different was happening here but they also notice is that this star
was moving it wasn't actually stationary and it was moving in a very particular
way it was moving just like this as it's illustrated in this diagram what this diagram shows is
the speed of the star that's coming towards you or receding from you so
basically what you do is you go on this plot here as it goes up this curve as the velocity becomes positive it
basically means that the star is going towards you and as it's going down it's going away from you and it's repeating
this motion towards you away from you so when astronomers see this kind of diagram they become really excited why
because this basically means that this star is part of a binary system okay
what do I mean by binary system I basically mean that this star is in
orbit with another object for now we don't know what this object is and the two are orbiting around each other okay
and this is causing the star to move here in this orbit and so for now let's just focus on this movement of the star
and I'm going to explain this diagram a little bit more in detail so what's happening is that as the star orbits in
this direction it's actually going towards you okay so the star is up here in this diagram but as it moves in the
diagram at this point it's not going towards you're away from you it's just going from left to right okay so it's
here it has a velocity of zero but as it continues in its orbit in this phase here it's going away from you and you
continue and continue and this is what happens and this is why you get this kind of diagram so this is why it means
that this system here is part of a binary system but the question is with what what's the
other object okay so we know that these massive stars have as I mentioned do not
really emit a lot of x-rays okay so that's this basically means that perhaps
the x-rays are actually coming from the other objects here okay so what is it
could it be a star could it be some other kind of exotic object we don't
know for now but what astronomers did know is that when they looked at this diagram here okay they can actually
calculate just how massive the other companion has to be because the the
intensity of the velocity so how fast the star is orbiting around the other object and the the period here of this
diagram basically tells you a lot of information about the system and it tells you the information about the
other object so just how massive this one is and what they found was something quite interesting they found that this
object was very massive okay we're talking about at least three times the mass of her Sun at the very least okay
so this meant that technically it should be maybe some kind of other star and yet they weren't seeing it they could see no
kind of signature of any star mission so what was going on so this was part of
the second clue okay now the third one is that when they studied the x-ray emission that was coming from this
object they actually noticed that it was varying so yes the source was emitting a
lot of x-rays but this kind of emission was varying quite significantly and when
they looked at in even more detail the kind of time skills were talking about microseconds so on microseconds the
source the amount of x-rays it was emitting was varying by several factors okay so a very huge amount and this is a
problem in astronomy why because it tells you that essentially the object the size of the object has to be quite
small to be able to vary that quickly because the information time it takes for the information to code from one end
of the object to the other it depends essentially on just how fast you can transmit that information and the
fastest thing that we know of is like okay nothing can go faster than light travels at about 200,000 miles per
second it's extremely quick and so that limits just how fast the information can
travel and so how small your object is because we know it's varying on microseconds all right so this basically
told astronomers that the object to be able to vary this quickly had to be very small so that the information could move
from one end to the other and so the question is how small so they calculated this and what they found was that the
object had to be very very tiny we're talking about hundreds of kilometers wide okay and there are only three
things that we know of in astronomy that can be extremely small yet extremely
massive and these three things all come from the deaths of stars okay so the
first kind of object is a white dwarf so what happens is that you have very so if
you have a very normal star for example a star that's about the mass of our Sun this star is basically burning fuel in
order to fight gravity but the problem is that stars can't burn fuel forever they run out at some point and so at
some point gravity wins and everything collapses and so what you get for a star
that's like our Sun you end up with something that we call a white dwarf so basically you have this kind of object
now the problem with white doors is that we know that they're actually much bigger than hundreds of kilometers
they're typically thousands of kilometers wide and so basically white dwarfs are too big to explain this
object so astronomers said no it's not a white dwarf the second object they examined was neutron stars
okay so neutron stars are what happens is that if you have an even more massive
star to start off this one collapses into a white dwarf when it dies but at
some point since the mass is so big even the white dwarf can't support the pressure of this mass and then the white
dwarf end up collapsing and forming a neutron star so an even smaller object and we know that neutron stars are
typically a dozen kilometers wide so yes they're quite small however
they we astronomers know that neutron star can only go up to a certain mass they can only be up to about three solar
as times the mass of our Sun okay if it's above that mass what happens is
that gravity wins over again there's too much gravity the star collapses even further and so what do
you get you get a black hole okay and so basically white dwarf was too big
neutron star it was impossible because they knew that the mass of this object was more than three times the mass of
our Sun so the only possibility they were left with was a black hole and so
what is a black hole well by definition this is what a black hole looks like
okay essentially black holes are objects
so compact that nothing can escape escape gravity is so strong that even
lights cannot escape that's why they're called black holes but in terms of this
size there is a definition of just how big black holes can be so this is what we call the event horizon which measures
the radius within which nothing can escape okay so within this radius not even light can escape that defines the
size of a black hole it's approximately given by what we call the Schwartz your radius which is given
by this equation here but I won't go into detail but this equation but just to give you kind of an order of magnitude if you take something that's
as massive as three times the mass of our Sun so something similar to what we were seeing in Cygnus x1 then the size
of the black hole is tiny we're talking about nine kilometers so black holes are extremely compact massive structures
very powerful so this is what astronomers thought was going on here
and so but the problem is that I just told you that black holes don't emit light because nothing can escape from it
not even light but we know that this object here was emitting a ton of x-rays so what's going on well what happens is
that these two here these two objects are so close to each other there are
reading around in Turners so quickly they're so close that the black hole is literally tearing apart the star and
just to show you this kind of looks like so this is an illustration of what we think is going on so you have a gigantic massive star
and you have the black hole here and basically the two are so close to each other that the black hole is literally
tearing the star apart and as it does this it drags material material starts
circulating forming what we call an accretion disk which will eventually be
accreted onto the black hole and as material settles into this accretion disk what happens is that the material
here is traveling very quickly okay almost at the speed of light it's being attracted by this immense gravity that's
created by the black hole and as material does this there's a lot of friction that's created so the material
essentially heats up due to this friction very it's very similar to what you do when you rub your hands together
try and get them warm this is the same thing there is friction it heats up but
the friction is so intense that it heats up - we're talking about 20 million degrees Fahrenheit and even more so
extremely hot and this is why this source here is beaming in x-rays this is
why it's so bright in the x-rays and this kind of object this is what I call a monster something so powerful that it
can literally tear up a star although as we saw the size is tiny so very very
tiny we're talking nine kilometers well so this is this is what's going on now astronomers in the last couple of years
have studied this object quite intensively and now we know that the
star here we have a very precise estimate of its mass about twenty times the mass of our Sun and this black hole
is actually fifteen times the mass of our Sun so very massive and so this is
the kind of object I'll be talking about for the rest of this talk and so just to give you kind of a glimpse of what I'm
going to talk about so I showed you one example of one kind of black hole that we see these are what we call
stellar-mass black holes so the remnants basically of the death of a very massive
star so we're talking about an initial star that had about a mass of 20 times
the mass of our Sun and this collapsed due to gravity when it no longer could fuel its burn its fuel and so
these kinds of stellar masses a black ghost typically have this kind of mass however what I'm going to talk about for
the rest of the talk is what we call supermassive black holes okay so these are black holes that are
gigantic they're at least a million times the mass of our Sun so huge we
essentially think that almost all galaxies have one of these monsters at its center
okay so I'll talk about this and then finally I'm going to talk about the kind of research that I do so I work on these
supermassive black holes but I actually work on the biggest ones that exists okay and so I'm not gonna tell you just
yet how big they can actually get I'll tell you that at the end but basically this is a kind of object I study so
really really big supermassive black holes and so let's go and move on to
this kind of optic and so we're gonna take another journey this time we're gonna go somewhere very different in the
sky and just to give you an idea of where we're gonna go so basically this is a very nice illustration of what we
think our own galaxy looks like ok so we are part of a galaxy called the Milky Way it's very difficult to know exactly
what it looks like because we're in it and so it's difficult to see what it looks like from outside but this is the
kind of picture we we think it looks like and so you have these beautiful spiral arms the Milky Way is basically a
spiral galaxy this is where we are located here okay so we're approximately
26,000 light-years away from the center and what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna focus here right at the center here this is
where we're gonna look at and as we'll see there's a very interesting monster right at the center here and to kind of
tell you show you what this monster looks like we're gonna use the Chandra
x-ray Observatory so this is a very very nice telescope this is one of the telescopes I use I use for my research
it was launched in 1999 what's really amazing about this telescope is that it
significantly increase the resolution of x-ray images it went from a factor of
about 10 when it was launched so it was ten times better resolution and I'm
gonna show you just an idea of what kind of improvement it made thanks to this telescope here so
if we take a picture of the center of our galaxy so we've focused our camera here right at the center this is what we
would see before Chandra okay so you see before Tantra there's some structure but
you don't really know what's going on now I'm going to show you what you see with Chandra this is what you see okay
so this is the C amazing thing about Chandra it's kind of like the Hubble but
for x-ray astronomy we get amazing images out of it so this is a very very deep image of the center of our galaxy
called the galactic center okay so basically what this means is that imagine you took your camera okay
and you took a picture of the night sky but you open the shutter and so that it
collects lights for over twenty six days this is how long this exposure is so it's a very very deep image you can see
a lot more objects the deeper you go and so you see there's a lot of structure here and I'm gonna talk about two or
three of these and then focus on one particular object so there's interesting structures here so for example this
structure here which is called Sagittarius b2 happens to be a very cold
molecular gas okay and we know that cold objects don't really emit x-rays and yet
it's showing up in this image so what astronomers think is going on is that this amount of cold gas is actually
being illuminated by all of the x-ray photons that are coming here so all of the x-ray lights and as this light goes
to the molecular cloud it gets reflected and that's how we see it light up okay
this is an interesting structure another interesting structure is here which is called 1e 1743 this is one of the
another candidate so we think that what's actually going on is that there's another binary system here consisting
again of a black hole and a very massive star and so this is another candidate
and we know about 30 systems of these in the Milky Way okay so Cygnus x1 isn't the only one
there are about 30 other candidates where we think there's a black hole that's tearing up a very massive star
here you have another interesting structure which is basically a bunch of massive stars that are all packed
together due to gravity so that's interesting but I'm gonna focus here okay so this is a very well known object
called Sagittarius a and as you can see it emits a lot of x-rays so let's zoom
in right on this portion here okay so very tiny but let's zoom in there and let's see what it looks like in the
x-rays so this is what you get okay so the same square here is the same region
as we were seeing this tiny square here so we're zooming in quite significantly this is an even deeper Chandra image of
the very very center so the very galactic center it's over 34 days of
exposure so ultra ultra deep and we can see a lot of structure but we can see in particular one object here which stands
out and this is what we call Sagittarius a star so let's zoom in even more so you
can do this with Chandra and what you see is there's this fuzzy cloud here now it's really interesting is that
astronomers found that is what was actually happening is that a lot of this gas was being expelled okay so something
was expelling the gas and so the idea that you can get is there's actually one
supermassive black hole at the center here that's accreting material but that it's also expelling a lot of material and the
reason why we think that it's a supermassive black hole it's based on a very important discovery that's been
made over the last 15 years and it's a discovery concerning the galactic center
okay and I'm going to show you this discovery here and so basically what they did is that astronomers observed
the stars at the center of our galaxy so on Sagittarius a star and this is what
you see here so all of these fuzzy blobs are individual stars okay and what we'll
see is a video that was made over the last 16 years okay so it's a lot of data
these are the real images so it's not a simulation this is really what you see
okay and so just to show you I want you to focus in particular on this star here
okay as you'll see so the stars are gonna move
and this is what you see okay so the video is repeating over four cycles and
zooming in each time and so what you see is that the stars are moving okay but
what's really incredible is that this one here is moving very quickly and then
it goes back up and then it goes back up okay what's happening so basically you
have a star that's going in a essentially an orbit it's orbiting
around something it's orbiting around something that we cannot see that's black okay and so very similar to the
way astronomers worked on Cygnus x1 based on just how fast the star is
moving about this invisible point you can calculate the kind of mass that has to be there of this this object here
that's essentially black and when you do this the kind of mass that you get is four million times the mass of our Sun
so gigantic and so we're talking about
an extremely massive dark object now the other interesting thing is that if you look at the kind of scales you're
dealing with so when this star actually approaches there's kind of like a
beeping that's it okay okay I will
ignore the beeping and so when this star actually approaches here okay the kind of distance it reaches is
about six light hours it's very very
tiny just to give you an indication six light hours corresponds to approximately the size of our solar system okay so it
takes light about eight minutes to reach but to go from the Sun to earth okay and
for six like hours it's approximately the size of O that is not me okay
so this is a black hole
and okay so I'll continue a little bit so this is one of the really the strongest pieces of evidence that we
have for these existence of an invisible object that we cannot see extremely massive a supermassive black hole okay
so four million times the mass of our Sun all of this has to fit inside the solar system of a solar system so very
very compact and so people have been taking these data for over 16 years now
and they've actually measured the orbits of about a dozen of these stars so they get a very very good constraint on the
mass of this object and I'm going to show you other interesting pictures very
soon it started beeping okay and so I'll
show you a picture as soon as this comes on line of something that's happening now very that's very interesting about
Sagittarius a star so the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy there's actually a cloud that's
approaching this black hole okay this cloud is named g2 and we've known about
this cloud for a couple of years now and so we've seen it approaching this supermassive black hole and actually now
this year this is when this cloud is supposed to interact with the black hole and so we'll be able to see exactly how
black hole accretes mass and this is going to be an amazing opportunity and
I'm going to show you a picture very soon of this cloud that's actually approaching the supermassive black hole and we can just about now we can start
seeing it being torn apart okay but stay
tuned for the results because this year is going to be extremely exciting concerning that and at some point I will
show you this okay so there are two leading theories
so one is either gas okay but there's actually a group that published a paper about a year ago that suggests that this
cloud is actually a star yes so we don't have the technology to resolve the
clouds we don't know just how small it is so now we just see a fuzzy image but we'll see once it interacts with the
black hole because that will be very different if it's a star or or a cloud
of gas so we will see it's starting to we can see it kind of starting to spread
out we can't resolve it but we can see that the velocity has been changing and so this is consistent with it being torn
apart although we can't resolve a cloud but yeah I can take yeah let me take
questions okay thank you yeah yeah so
you see very different things oh yes okay so I showed you a picture of
what the galactic center looks like in the x-rays and so the question is if I understood correctly what it looks like
at other wavelengths so there's actually a very interesting discovery that was
announced about a week ago about an image taken in the radio okay and what
you see okay cool and I want to show you
that image and then I'm gonna come back here okay
okay so this is the image so basically what you see in the purplish colors this times is the x-rays okay so you see the
same structure as before but in the radio here you see a lot of this kind of
weird material here and there's actually something very faint in the x-rays here
that you may not have seen initially but there's a jetty structure okay and what
they're suggesting is that there's actually a jet coming out of the Senate the supermassive black hole it's
interacting with material here creating a shock front and this lights up in the in the radio okay this is a very new new
discovery so we'll see if this actually works but coming back okay and I'll take
more questions at the end yeah and so let me show you just once one
more time this video because it really is amazing and so you have all of these stars orbiting and then in particular
this one and so these again are the real images so there are a lot of simulations out there but these this is a real thing
this is really what's happening and concerning the cloud g2 this is basically what we see okay so this is
the zoomed in version of the previous figure these are the individual stars
okay so we can't actually resolve the Stars so they're just fuzzy blobs and this is the cloud so we can track its
movement from 2006 2010 2013 this the black hole is located approximately here
okay so it's starting to interact and then it's gonna do something very amazing we still not sure how it's gonna
react it might just flip over we don't know we'll see okay but time will tell
okay so it's very interesting but this is this is what's happening now
okay but although Sagittarius a stars or the black hole at the center of our
galaxy is very interesting it's actually what we call very quiescent so there is some activity but not that much okay and
there are other black holes what we call active black holes that are very different these are the exciting ones
okay these are black holes that are recruiting a lot of material and what's happening is that in some black holes
they're able to emit what we call Jets okay and these are Jets of made of
relativistic particles so particles that are very energetic what's very strange
about these Jets is that they seem to be extremely thin okay and one of the ways we explain this is that essentially
what's holding them together what's making them so thin our magnetic fields now when you take if anybody has done a
physics class okay if you take magnetic fields and you take relativistic particles and these relativistic
particles are accelerating in a magnetic field what do you get you get what we call synchrotron emission okay so this
is a very typical kind of emission that we see in in the universe and basically synchrotron emission Peaks in the radio
so when astronomers study these kinds of structures here they use for example
Chandra to study the hot gas that's on the accretion disk that's heated to millions of degrees Fahrenheit but they
use what we call radio telescopes to study these jetted structures here okay so although radio lights isn't very
energetic it indirectly traces very energetic particles that are accelerating in magnetic fields and so
we use a combination of these two kinds of telescope to understand these objects and this is basically what I do for my
research and so I'm going to show you some examples of these active black holes okay now to do this we have to go
on we have to look at this in a very different region of the sky so not at the center of our galaxy not towards the
Cygnus constellation but what we're gonna do is we're gonna go away from the galaxies okay so our neighboring galaxy
is called Andromeda it's located up approximately at a distance of two million light-years from us but what
we're gonna do is we're gonna go ten times further than that okay and what we'll hit we'll hit a very interesting galaxy
called Centaurus A so Centaurus a is the galaxy that contains the nearest active
supermassive black hole okay and we'll just see how powerful this kind of object can be this kind of monster can
be and so this is a beautiful optical image okay of the galaxy what you see is
very typical this is a very large galaxy this kind of stream here is essentially
dust and so dust absorbs light and prevents us from seeing what's happening at the center so this is typically what
you see however if you look at the same exact image this time in the radio we're
calling that radio allows us to trace these Jets of relativistic particles this is what you see same image but in
the radio only you see something completely different okay this is why it's so important to combine
different kinds of lights to try and understand what's going on this is why astronomers use all kinds of telescope
to try and understand the physics behind what's going on and so just showing you
this image again this is a radio now what I'm going to show you is the same exact image but this time in the x-rays
this is what you see so this is a beautiful image taken again with the Chandra x-ray telescope you see
something totally different you see yes the jets light up in x-rays you see these beautiful
interactions here that are lighting up in the x-rays but you also see a bunch of point sources okay we think that a
lot of these points are actually these some of these binary systems that I talked to you about where you have a
stellar mass black hole and a massive star and the two are orbiting close to each other and the black hole is
shredding the star this is where we think at least some of them are doing but it's you see something completely different and so combining all of these
together this is a picture that we can build we have a very massive galaxy okay
so a galaxy typically is maybe fifty thousand light-years across okay so it
takes light fifty thousand years to cross it and what you see is that you see these beautiful Jets that are on the
scale of the galaxy so gigantic Jetts and these are being created by one single object by one single supermassive
black hole at the center of this galaxy okay so this is the power of black holes although they're tiny in size they're
literally about a billion times smaller than the Sun the size of the galaxy although they're tiny they can create
enormous structures extremely powerful they can have a very important impact on their surrounding medium and by
extension their their galaxies okay and this is the kind of thing that I study
however there are black holes that are even more active than this okay so this
is just one example and we'll see the the things that are even more powerful and to do that we have to go somewhere
else in the universe and what we'll do is first of all I'm gonna show you what the universe looks like okay so I'm
gonna show you one of my favorite images and so this is a very nice image taken
from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey basically what it did is that they looked at the sky and they said I'm
gonna count all the galaxies in the sky and I'm gonna place them on a diagram so
every single point you see here represents one galaxy we're calling that
each galaxy contains billions of stars okay so this is how big the universe is this is huge and just to point out this
kind of scale is only a tiny tiny tiny fraction of the actual universe universe goes beyond these kinds of light-years
okay those is very very tiny and yet you see that there are a lot of galaxies and
what's interesting is that you see that these galaxies aren't randomly distributed there's actually structure
there are these very beautiful filaments here okay and these filaments tend to
meet up and what we call clusters of galaxies okay now before I get there I'm
gonna there's I want to make one analogy that the reason why this has been always so interesting to me is that it reminded
me a lot of what neurons actually look like in the brain so you see just
neurons here and then connection by the foot like filaments and so it's very similar what you see in outer space so
to me this has always been something very impressive but I'm gonna focus
these clumps here which are called clusters of galaxies and I'm going to show you one example one very famous
example of a cluster so basically clusters of galaxies are consist of hundreds to thousands of galaxies that
are bound together by gravity so this is one example here this is one of the most massive clusters that we
know of think thousands of galaxies and so you see all of these yellow points
here representing galaxies so this is a beautiful image taken with the Hubble Space Telescope now what I'm gonna do is
I'm going to show you what we see in the x-rays okay so we're calling again that x-rays trace is very hot energetic phenomena so
the exact same image this time in the x-rays okay I don't know if you were
expecting that but basically basically what this means are that clusters are actually x-ray sources okay so it's not
only the accretion disks around black holes but clusters are also x-ray sources so why is this
and so just combining these two images here and so to try understand this I'm
gonna recall that basically when we look at x-rays we're looking at things that are very very hot so we're talking about
at least 20 million degrees Fahrenheit and the reason why clusters happen to be
very ex luminous sources is because they're very massive okay so we're talking about the most massive
gravitationally bound objects in the universe these clusters and because of that whenever gas falls into the cluster
it gains a lot of energy because of the potential well and as it does this it
gets heated up to extreme temperatures it gains a lot of velocity this translates to a very high temperature
gas and so much there so massive that the gas gets heated up to about 20
million degrees Fahrenheit and even higher okay and it's simply because they're extremely massive and anything
that falls in there is gonna gain a lot of speed it's gonna get heated up and it's gonna meant a lot of x-rays and so
this is some of the objects I've been studying and the x-ray emission actually tells us a lot about what's going on and
I'm going to show you two typical examples of what we see of the x-ray emission and clusters of galaxies
and so the first one is a very famous cluster named the bullet cluster okay so some of you may have seen these images
and so the bullet cluster was discovered as several years ago and it's very
interesting because what you see is this is an optical image so it traces the galaxies you see there's a bunch of
galaxies that seem to be kind of linked here and then there are another group here so what's going on so basically
what I'm going to show you next is the same image but in the x-rays this is
what you see ok so what this tells us is that yes okay clusters emit x-rays but
there's a lot of structure going on here there's this very weird shape structure
here and what this actually looks like is what we call a shock front very
similar to what happens when a bullet goes through the air or water creates a
shock front here ok so what's happening okay basically in this cluster here is
that initially this massive structure consisted of two smaller clusters of galaxies so one cluster that contained
these galaxies and another one contained these galaxies now what happened is that when these clusters collided okay so
they they literally collided against each other what happens is that the galaxies are what we call collision
lists so it's very rare that two galaxies are you going to directly hit each other and so they're just going to pass through okay so galaxies just
passed through and so what you see is one bunch of galaxies here one bunch here so they just pass through however
the hot what we call intra cluster gas the one that you see in the x-rays is
not collisionless this gas will heavily interact okay and so what happens is
that at some point one of the clusters went faster than the speed of sound broke the sound barrier and created one
of these shock fronts here and this is what you're seeing so very similar to what happens with bullets but we're
seeing this on astronomical scales okay so it's really gigantic gigantic skills
so we're talking about much much bigger than the size of an individual galaxy now the other kind of structure that
see that I'm very very interested in okay and so again this is based on the
x-ray mission that we've seen clusters of galaxies so to show you this kind of emission I'm gonna focus on one of my
favorite objects which is the Perseus cluster so the Perseus cluster is again a very massive cluster of galaxies
contains hundreds to thousands of galaxies all bound by gravity the center of the class the cluster is actually
located here okay so this is a beautiful image very big cluster but the center is
here and as you can see there's something very strange going on with this galaxy it doesn't look like the
other galaxies so what we're gonna do is we're gonna zoom in right here on this galaxy so this is what we see so this is
the central galaxy in the Perseus cluster okay so again Perseus cluster contains
hundreds of galaxies and basically what you see is you have a lot of structure okay and you see these beautiful
filaments here and a lot of people including here at Stanford study these
filaments because very difficult to explain how they got there but I'm gonna focus on what we see in the x-rays okay
because we're tracing the hot universe so the same image but I'm gonna show you the x-rays so we definitely should see
some kind of x-ray emission because we know clusters emit x-rays and so this is what we see okay
so again I don't know if you were expecting this but this is for me one of my favorite images okay and I'm gonna
explain what's going on so this is the x-ray emission in blue okay so you see a lot of x-ray emission and this is coming
from the hot intra cluster gas but you see a lot of structure here here here
now what we're gonna do is we're going to look at the same image but I'm gonna overlay what we see in the radio because
maybe this is gonna tell us a bit more information but what's going on and so this is what we see in the radio so the
pink blobs are where all the radio emission is coming now we're calling that the radio emission is a very good
indicator of synchrotron emission so the emission coming from the Jets created by a black hole so what's actually going on
is you have the central galaxies this galaxies here contains a very active
supermassive black hole this supermassive black hole is creating Jets of relativistic plasma that we see in
the radio but as these Jets propagates through the hot intra cluster gas they
literally push the hot gas away okay so they're literally just pushing it away
doing work against them the medium here and this is what we're seeing so you
have the black hole Jets and they're pushing all of this gas away and these are what we call bubbles in astronomy or
x-ray cavities and this is the kind of object that I study now the reason why
this is so remarkable is that before if we did not have the x-ray information if
we only had the location of the galaxies here and only the radio we did we wouldn't know how the radio actually
affects the surrounding medium okay because we still don't understand exactly what Jets are made of or how
they're made however we see through the x-rays the actual work that the Jets are
doing on the medium so we literally see that they're pushing it away and so we can quantify just how energy you need to
literally push away this amount of gas okay and just on the scale indicator here this is a typical size of our
galaxy okay so these bubbles are the size or even bigger than the size of our
galaxy and these bubbles are create being created by one single black hole
so this is just how powerful they are now what's really interesting is that as
you can see the structure here these this structure way up there actually represents an older cavity okay which
has risen buoyantly and this is exactly what we see with bubbles in water okay so bubbles and water what they do
is they rise towards the surface they just rise there and this is exactly what we're seeing here these bubbles just
rise through the inter-cluster medium towards the medium that's less dense and so
they're just gonna rise up and this is what we're seeing this is very interesting except we're seeing again on
astronomical scales so much different skills now one interesting discovery
that was made a couple of years ago is looking at this Perseus cluster of galaxies and looking at the
x-ray emission that you're getting away from this bubble here so this these are the bubbles that we were seeing before
but if you consider this region here and you study the kind of emission that
you're seeing as a function of what we call radius so as a function of how far you're going away from the bubble well
you see something very interesting okay you see this kind of emission so this is
the amount of x-rays you're getting okay as a function of what we call the radius so the distance from the bubble as you
go further away why you see our waves okay these are gigantic waves okay these are
much larger than our own galaxy so very very big waves and actually what's
interesting is that x-ray emission this basically is telling us that the density of this gas is varying according to this
and it's also telling us that the pressure is essentially changing now
what do you get when you see waves of changing pressure they're basically
sound waves but in outer space and for
those that yes exactly for those that have any talent in music
fortunately I don't at all but this is the kind of sound that you would hear from these sound waves so our ear cannot
hear them but just to give you a kind of indication of what you would hear so
this is really interesting things now you can actually see these sound waves if you play around with the image so you
have your image here of the Perseus cluster this is another more zoomed out
image of the x-ray machine you're getting so the bubbles this is the outer bubble I showed you now there's actually
a lot of structure around these bubbles here okay and if you play around with
the image to try and bring out these structures a bit more this is what you get okay so this technique here is
called unsharp masking it's a very common technique that we use in astronomy to try and bring out all the faint features it's actually a technique
that's used also in biophysics to try and bring out faint features in for example MRI scans and so this is just
some that we use and you see these beautiful waves just coming out of the cluster and
these are sound waves and these are sound waves being generated by the creation of these bubbles as they're
being created and they're created by the central supermassive black hole now the question is just how powerful are these
actual sound waves and these cavities so we see that they're gigantic so they should be extremely energetic and I'm
going to show you just how powerful they are and so to kind of give you an example in comparison of just how
powerful so if we take a typical energy of an atomic bomb so this is one of the
most energetic phenomenon that we know of on earth and so we know that this is a kind of energy that one atomic bomb
liberate okay so we're talking about 10 million tons of TNT now I'm gonna show
you another example just to show you how energetic these things are but for this
example we're gonna take the Sun okay so the Sun is very bright okay and the sky
is emitting a lot of energy now let's assume that it's emitting this kind of energy for its entire life okay so we
can get an estimate of just how much energy the Sun will have liberated in its entire life and the kind of number
that we get is gigantic okay so there should be 28 zeroes in there okay and I
actually looked up and there is this number exists it's called an octillion I had no idea before but it exists and so
this is the kind of energy you get from the Sun now I'm going to show you the kind of energy you get from one single
bubble created by the supermassive black hole this is the kind of energy you get
so there's 37 zeroes in there okay this is known as an onion gigantic number
okay it's hard to conceive just how energetic this is and all of this energy is coming from one single object okay so
extremely massive so this is the kind of thing that I study now what's really
interesting is that I'm going to take this Perseus cluster here so this is a
very nearby cluster this is why we study it so much because we have such great data on it and I'm going to show you on
the same scale okay another cluster with another set of cavities so this is call
MSO 735 it was discovered quite some time ago but it's very interesting why
because the bubbles in here so what you're seeing is the x-ray emission okay
and the blue you see the radio here in the pink colors these cavities here are
the bubbles that we were seeing very similar to in Perseus however this is the appropriate scale okay so these
cavities here are 10 times larger than the ones in Perseus and again these
cavities are being created by one single black hole located at the centre of this cluster so just imagine the kind of
energetics and this is an indication this little diagram here is the size of
our galaxy okay so this is what we're dealing with these are the monsters these are the biggest monsters among the
monsters this is what I kind of what I study now I've studied a lot of these
objects here and what's interesting is that you can ask the question what kind of black holes you need to be able to
create such big cavities okay and so what we find is that you actually need a
very particular kind of black hole and so I'm going to come back here to this diagram that I showed you earlier of
what black holes look like so this is the event horizon which defines the radius within which nothing can escape
not even light the size of this horizon depends on the mass of the black hole
the bigger the black hole the larger the event horizon okay
what's actually interesting and that I didn't mention is that black holes are actually quite simple mathematically
okay why because they are completely characterized by three parameters the
mass okay well and then the other parameter is what we call the spin the spin measure is just how fast the black
hole is spinning around itself these quantity is it tends to be what we call
a normalized quantity so zero means it's not spinning ones mean means it's spinning at its maximal value and this
is related to the fact that a black hole can't spin faster than the speed of light and nothing can go faster than the speed of light so that determines an
upper bound now the charge is technically mathematically a third parameter however we think that all Astrophysical
black holes have a charge equal to zero the reason for this is simply because when we look at the universe we see that
it's essentially largely neutral okay there's nothing that's tends to be charged according to a certain charge so
black holes if one initially was created and had a charge a positive charge for example it would quickly neutralize
because on average the universe is neutral so we think that essentially Astrophysical black holes don't have a
charge so we're left with two parameters and these two parameters completely determine the properties of the black
hole it determines just how powerful they can be just how powerful it can create Jets determines also just how
much mass it can accrete at least the maximum value and so when we look at the be the big cavities here we can ask
ourselves what kind of black holes do we need to create them and so what we come up with is actually quite interesting is
that it seems that an easy explanation would be either that it's highly spinning or as we'll see it's related to
the mass and so what's interesting is that astronomers can actually measure the spin of black holes
okay now this now it may sound weird because how do you measure the spin of an object you cannot see okay but we can
do this and the way we do this is we use general relativity so it's very
interesting because general relativity predicts that the kind of phenomenon
that's gonna happen related to the accretion disk varies depending if the black hole is spinning or not so if you
take a non spinning black hole what happens is that the material as it gets secreted
can only a creep to a certain radius this radius is known as the inner most
stable orbit what happens is that as soon as the material crosses this orbit it just plummets directly to the black
hole however what happens when you deal with spinning black holes this inner
most stable orbit changes what happens with spinning black hole is that there's a very interesting effect okay called
frame dragging so spinning black holes as they spin they tend to drag with them
space-time okay and as a like that with them what happens is that the material gets dragged in closer to
the black hole okay so the inner most stable orbit here gets closer so when we
study black holes and we're looking at the x-ray emission coming from these accretion discs what happens is that when we look at
this kind of black hole the material only goes to a certain point near the black hole and so it gets heated up to
up to a certain temperature however when we look at spinning black holes what happens that the material goes closer so
it feels the gravity even stronger okay and it gets heated to even higher temperatures and we can actually measure
the difference in temperature between these two systems and this is how we can constrain just how fast the black hole
is spinning and so this has been done for about 30 systems maybe 40 systems so
far where we've actually measured the spin of a black hole it's been done for stellar-mass black holes so black holes
in these binary systems which are tearing up a star but it's also been done for supermassive black holes and we
tend to see a variety kinds of spin so they're not all highly spinning they're not all non spinning it's a variety and
so astronomers are trying to understand is there a link do we that does this tell us about maybe the accretion
history of the black hole so they're trying to do this and so the question is for our big cavities an easy way to
create very powerful Jets is if you have a spinning black hole and the reason for
this is very interesting is that actually the higher the spin the more powerful the Jets that can create so you
can create very powerful Jets simply by having a spinning black hole now the other possibility that astronomers have
envisage is that perhaps what we're dealing with are is simply the most massive black holes in the universe okay
so these are extremely powerful they were located in the most massive galaxies in the universe which are found
at the Centers of these clusters so they should have very massive black holes and so the question is just how massive and
there have been a couple measurements of these black holes at the Centers of clusters so far and I'm going to show
you what kind of numbers you get and but before I do that just to give you a kind of scale of what how just how big they
are so basically I'm gonna start with the stellar-mass black holes so we know that they have typical masses between three
and four times the mass of our Sun now recalling that the size of the black holes with the event horizon so the
radius within us nothing can escape not even light it's given by this equation here well you get four stellar-mass
black holes is that their size is essentially the size of the bay area approximately okay so big but not that
big if you take supermassive black holes okay and we saw one example of a very
famous one located at the center of our galaxy called Sagittarius a star we saw
that the mass of this black hole was about four million times the mass of our Sun so significantly larger so if you
plug this into this equation what kind of size of the black holes you get you
basically get about twelve million kilometers which is approximately twice the size of the Sun so you have two suns
that fit within this black hole here okay and now for the biggest black holes
okay so the biggest black holes that we've measured so far so the masses are about ten billion times the mass of our
Sun okay so gigantic black holes they're about ten thousand times bigger than the
black hole at the center of our galaxy this is the kind of measurements that we get and two of these gigantic black
holes are located at the Centers of clusters of galaxies and so just to give you an idea of what this kind of scale
means okay so this is the size of the black holes but I'm plotting here and this little arrow here is Neptune's
orbit so basically this black hole is several times the size of our solar
system it's humongous all the hue huge black hole several times the size of our
solar system it's very hard to envisage just how big it is but it's huge okay
and so these are the monsters among the monsters these are the really gigantic black holes and we know of at least four
of these that exists in outer space and two of them are at the Centers of clusters of galaxies
now I'm gonna just to finish on that bang I'm gonna end here I will take
questions but I just want to let you know that there are a couple people here that will also gladly answer questions
and so they're all wearing helmets okay yes so there are three of them here
today unfortunately one had to cancel due to emergency but essentially there is arena here I will try to pronounce
her last name Judah's leva she's actually working on clusters of galaxies
and she's finding very interesting results concerning the outskirts of clusters and concerning the sound waves
that I showed you and so do ask her questions after the talk Andre here is a
graduate student at Stanford he is also working on clusters of galaxies and is
very interesting he's actually published a nature paper so this is a very prestigious journal he published a nature paper earlier this year
concerning a very interesting result about clusters so do ask him questions too about this paper and there's a
finally Sam Skillman so he's the theory guy he's the guy who simulates what we
think is going on with the physics of clusters collides clusters and simulations so he's a theory guy so
please feel free to ask him questions too and I will stop here