Data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has helped provide a rare opportunity to determine the distance to an object on the other side of the Milky Way galaxy.
Source: Chandra X-ray Observatory |
What are these rings and what information do they provide? These rings are light echoes, similar to sound echoes that we may experience here on Earth. Instead of sound waves bouncing off a canyon wall, the echoes around Circinus X-1 are produced when a burst of X-rays from the star system ricochet off of clouds of dust between Circinus X-1 and Earth.
This artist’s illustration shows in detail how the ringed structure seen by Chandra is produced. Each ring is caused by X-rays from the Circinus X-1 flare bouncing off of different dust clouds. If the cloud is closer to us, the ring appears to be larger. The result, as seen by Chandra, is a set of concentric rings with different apparent sizes depending on the distance of the intervening cloud from us. The physical sizes of the rings, using the labels given the illustration, are 41 light years (ring a), 49 light years (ring b), 55 light years (ring c), and 52 light years (ring d).
By combining the light echoes that Chandra detects with radio data from the Mopra radio telescope in Australia, which determined the distance to the intervening clouds, astronomers can estimate the distance to Circinus X-1 using relatively simple geometry. The light echo method generates a distance of 30,700 light years. The observation thus settles a large difference amongst previous results, one similar to this work and one indicating a much smaller distance of about 13,000 light years.
Such a difference in distance estimate to Circinus X-1 would have implications for other properties that have been observed before in the system. For example, if it is over twice as far away as some have previously thought, then this means its light output is much greater. (Consider a light bulb that is moved farther away, it will appear dimmer.) Because Circinus X-1 has been known to flare strongly in X-ray light, including an outburst in 2013, this implies that the system has exceeded the so-called Eddington Limit. This threshold, which is the balance between the inward pull of gravity and the outward push of radiation from an object, is generally only exceeded by systems containing black holes, not neutron stars.