Gaia BH2

Binary system in Centaurus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gaia BH2 (Gaia DR3 5870569352746779008) is a binary system consisting of a red giant and a stellar-mass black hole. Gaia BH2 is located about 3,800 light years away (1.16 kpc away) in the constellation of Centaurus, making it as of 2024 the third-closest known black hole system to Earth. Gaia BH2 is the second black hole discovered from Gaia DR3 astrometric data.[4]

Quick facts Constellation, Right ascension ...
Gaia BH2

DECaPS image of Gaia BH2 (star at the center)
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Centaurus[1]
Right ascension 13h 50m 16.748s[2]
Declination −59° 14 20.33[2]
Apparent magnitude (V) 12.711[3]
Characteristics
Red giant
Evolutionary stage Red giant branch[2]
Black hole
Evolutionary stage Stellar black hole[4]
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv)−5.04±2.08[2] km/s
Proper motion (μ) RA: −10.48±0.1 mas/yr[4]
Dec.: −4.61±0.06 mas/yr[4]
Parallax (π)0.859±0.018 mas[4]
Distance3,800 ± 80 ly
(1,160 ± 20 pc)
Orbit[4]
Period (P)1,276.7±0.6 d
Semi-major axis (a)4.96±0.08 AU
Eccentricity (e)0.5176±0.0009
Inclination (i)34.87±0.34°
Longitude of the node (Ω)266.9±0.5°
Periastron epoch (T)2457438.3±1.4
Argument of periastron (ω)
(secondary)
130.9±0.4°
Semi-amplitude (K1)
(primary)
25.23±0.04 km/s
Details
Red giant
Mass1.17±0.08[5] M
Radius8.55+0.20
−0.15
[5] R
Luminosity (bolometric)24.6±1.6[4] L
Surface gravity (log g)2.71±0.24[4] cgs
Temperature4,604±87[4] K
Metallicity [Fe/H]−0.22±0.02[4] dex
Rotation398±5[5] days (preliminary estimate)
Rotational velocity (v sin i)<1.5[4] km/s
Age5.1+1.2
−1.8
[5] Gyr
Black hole
Mass8.94±0.34[4] M
Other designations
Gaia BH2, UCAC4 154-126202, 2MASS J13501675-5914203, Gaia DR3 5870569352746779008
Database references
SIMBADdata
Close

The black hole and red giant orbit the system barycentre every 1,277 days, or around 3.5 years, with a moderate eccentricity of 0.518. The black hole's mass is around 8.94 M, which means its Schwarzschild radius should be about 26.4 km (16.4 mi).[4] The red giant has a mass of 1.17 M and a radius of 8.6 R.[5] Its temperature is estimated at 4,604 K (4,331 °C; 7,828 °F).[4] The star is enriched in alpha elements, thus is believed to have undergone mass transfer with another star.[4]

Discovery

Gaia BH2 was originally discovered as a black hole binary candidate in 2022, found via astrometric observations with Gaia, along with Gaia BH1. At that time it was not clear if Gaia BH2 did definitely harbour a black hole, but it was the only plausible candidate in the Gaia data other than Gaia BH1.[6][7] Later radial velocity observations confirmed this black hole system and refined its orbital parameters.[4]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI