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    Cosmic Hurricane: Black Hole Has 20 Million MPH Winds

    Scientists have measured the fastest winds yet observed from a stellar-mass black hole, shedding light on the behavior of these curious cosmic objects.

    The winds, clocked by astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, are racing through space at 20 million mph (32 million kph), or about 3 percent the speed of light. That's nearly 10 times faster than had ever been seen from a stellar-mass black hole, researchers said.

    "This is like the cosmic equivalent of winds from a Category 5 hurricane," study lead author Ashley King, of the University of Michigan, said in a statement. "We weren't expecting to see such powerful winds from a black hole like this."

    A stellar-mass black hole, which is born when an extremely massive star collapses, typically contains about five to 10 times the mass of our sun. The stellar-mass black hole powering this super wind is known as IGR J17091-3624, or IGR J17091 for short. [Photos: Black Holes of the Universe]

    IGR J17091 is a binary system in which a sun-like star orbits a black hole. It's found in the central bulge of our Milky Way galaxy, about 28,000 light-years from Earth.

    IGR J17091's wind matches some of the fastest generated by supermassive black holes, which are millions or billions of times more massive. Supermassive black holes are thought to reside at the heart of most if not all active galaxies, including our own Milky Way.

    "It's a surprise this small black hole is able to muster the wind speeds we typically only see in the giant black holes," said co-author Jon Miller, also from the University of Michigan. "In other words, this black hole is performing well above its weight class."

    Another surprising finding from the new study is that the wind, which comes from a disk of gas surrounding the black hole, may be blasting more material into space than the black hole is capturing.

    "Contrary to the popular perception of black holes pulling in all of the material that gets close, we estimate up to 95 percent of the matter in the disk around IGR J17091 is expelled by the wind," King said.

    Unlike hurricane winds on Earth, the wind from IGR J17091 is blowing in many different directions at once. This pattern distinguishes it from a jet, in which material flows in focused beams perpendicular to a black hole's disk, often at nearly the speed of light.

    Jets have been seen coming from IGR J17091 before. But observations made with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory's Expanded Very Large Array in New Mexico showed that a radio jet from the system was not present when the super-fast wind was blowing.

    This agrees with observations of other stellar-mass black holes, suggesting that ultra-speedy winds can quash jet production, researchers said.

    Scientists estimated IGR J17091's wind speeds using a spectrum made by Chandra in 2011. Observations made by the space telescope two months earlier showed no such winds, meaning the black hole's gale likely switches on and off over time.

    Astronomers think that magnetic fields in the accretion disks of black holes are responsible for producing both winds and jets. Characteristics of the magnetic fields and the rate at which material falls toward the black hole are thought to determine whether jets or winds are produced, researchers said.

    Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • First L  •  Phoenix, United States  •  3 months ago
      I love Astronomy. Period.
      • Pyewacket 3 months ago
        Some folk love period astronomy.
      • J. 3 months ago
        I love astrology, the one true science.
      • Bolt 3 months ago
        Hey J., I just read the stars chart for you : It said to give away all your possessions to the person you hate the most, then start a month long course of fellating horses. Sorry, man...just science.
    • Gilbert  •  2 months ago
      I'm glad they converted it to 32 million kph for us Canadians. Until then I didn't realize it was kinda fast.
      • Ezekiel 2 months ago
        you mean they converted it into kph for the rest of the world?
      • sahils 2 months ago
        yes america is the only country that use mph, inches, and feet, and miles
      • Damon 2 months ago
        That is be cause we rock!

        But not economically. :(
    • Gilbert  •  2 months ago
      This is why I stopped wearing my toupee to black holes.
    • David  •  3 months ago
      For those having a hard time grasping 20 million MPH, that’s New York to Los Angeles in a little under ½ second.
      • Rick 3 months ago
        Or how quick O commie can spend a trillion us tax dollars
      • Hesperos 3 months ago
        You wouldn't even have time to fasten your seat belt!
      • Harry Groinalarea 3 months ago
        Thanks Captain Science...grasping is hard ! ...you must be related to Bill Nay the Science Gay
    • ARCHER  •  2 months ago
      Dam, that hole blows faster then Kim Kardashian!
      • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
        chinese always leaves you hungry again in 15 minutes.
      • The_Donger 2 months ago
        my guess is that its Kim Kardashian's older sibling who taught her everything she knows.
    • Andrew v  •  3 months ago
      For those of you who think that there can be no wind in space, to a certain extent that's true. There is no atmosphere in space as it is a vacuum and therefore there can be no wind. A more accurate term to use is flow. The wind described here is actually the flow of a fluid. Remnant liquids or gasses from the atmosphere(s) of planets and stars being pulled into the black hole.
      • bodanize04 3 months ago
        How can you have vacuum without containment?
      • 40 SW 3 months ago
        Thank you. I find you explanation to have some theory, but I just find it hard to believe anything beyond the moon to be true. Unless someone was actually there to document, tough, see, feel, sniff or hear, its all theory.
      • SPC ONeal 3 months ago
        Don't you mean hypothesis?...
    • Kenshin Himura  •  2 months ago
      The most intriguing thing about these science articles isn't their content, but the level of absolute stupidity and ignorance still pervading the US as demonstrated by the majority of the comments.

      I keep forgetting that we are in the 21st century.
    • Chuck  •  3 months ago
      This is nothing. Go to Chicago.
    • Rusty  •  Marquette, United States  •  3 months ago
      That's the place we should put those wind turbines to produce power !
    • ROBERTM  •  Austin, United States  •  3 months ago
      is that where the USA trade deficit is going?
    • L0L  •  3 months ago
      The comments posted here reflect the state of science education in the US.

      That being said, this is mind boggling. That same speed, 20 million mph would allow you to run 26 times around the Earth (at the equator). The amazing part is that technically speaking, a black hole (even the one in the center of the Milky Way) is so small it is virtually nonexistant, but has an infinite density, and consequently, a pull so strong it can swallow stars larger than our Sun.

      If you can't wrap your head around that kind of power, consider even a small black hole would render everything we know as reality nonexistant less than a nanosecond after we pass the event horizon.
    • Hugh  •  Farmington, United States  •  3 months ago
      My black hole produces matter.
    • Joshua  •  Capitol Heights, United States  •  3 months ago
      Tom Tucker: How's the weather up there Ollie?

      Ollie: WINDY!!!!!!!!

      Tom Tucker: Can you describe what it looks like.

      Ollie: DON'T KNOW!!!

      Tom Tucker: Why not?

      Ollie: Black holes absorb all that gets caught in it's gravitational pull.
    • Blake  •  3 months ago
      Maybe they should send congress out there to verify this..
    • PaulL  •  3 months ago
      What I find equally amazing is that we are not observing this black hole and the accretion disk's winds as they are happening now. What we are looking at, is the black hole as it was 28,000 years ago. We're looking back into time, a point in time when we were still hunting and foraging, barely out of the woods on our own planet. For all we know, the winds there right now are twice as fast. Or the black hole has evaporated already.

      It's too cool to express. Time travel is not possible yet, but time vision is.
    • TM  •  Norfolk, United States  •  2 months ago
      Has anyone been able to count how many lies tells is a single day, you would need a million digit calculator and cross your fingers he short winded.
    • Guido  •  3 months ago
      Are we certain it wasn't once the site of a Hadron Collider?
    • none  •  2 months ago
      Stupid me. I thought you needed air to have
      wind. I didn't get the memo that we found it
      in space.
    • Geno  •  New Orleans, United States  •  2 months ago
      Cant get the weather prediction here right, but can tell how fast the wind is blowing some place a gazillion miles from here?
    • Robert L  •  Austin, United States  •  3 months ago
      I tried, but after my mexican dinner last night I was only able to create winds 2% the speed of light.
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