A wide star-black-hole binary system from radial-velocity measurements

Open Access
Authors
  • J. Liu
  • H. Zhang
  • A.W. Howard
  • Z. Bai
  • Y. Lu
  • R. Soria
  • S. Justham ORCID logo
  • X. Li
  • Z. Zheng
  • T. Wang
  • K. Belczynski
  • J. Casares
  • W. Zhang
  • H. Yuan
  • Y. Dong
  • Y. Lei
  • H. Isaacson
  • S. Wang
  • Y. Bai
  • Y. Shao
  • Q. Gao
  • Y. Wang
  • Z. Niu
  • K. Cui
  • C. Zheng
  • X. Mu
  • L. Zhang
  • A. Heger
  • Z. Qi
  • S. Liao
  • M. Lattanzi
  • W.-M. Gu
  • J. Wang
  • J. Wu
  • L. Shao
  • R. Shen
  • X. Wang
  • J. Bregman
  • R. Di Stefano
  • Q. Liu
  • Z. Han
  • T. Zhang
  • H. Wang
  • J. Ren
  • J. Zhang
  • J. Zhang
  • X. Wang
  • A. Cabrera-Lavers
  • R. Corradi
  • R. Rebolo
  • Y. Zhao
  • G. Zhao
  • Y. Chu
  • X. Cui
Publication date 28-11-2019
Journal Nature
Volume | Issue number 575 | 7784
Pages (from-to) 618-621
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
All stellar-mass black holes have hitherto been identified by X-rays emitted from gas that is accreting onto the black hole from a companion star. These systems are all binaries with a black-hole mass that is less than 30 times that of the Sun1,2,3,4. Theory predicts, however, that X-ray-emitting systems form a minority of the total population of star–black-hole binaries5,6. When the black hole is not accreting gas, it can be found through radial-velocity measurements of the motion of the companion star. Here we report radial-velocity measurements taken over two years of the Galactic B-type star, LB-1. We find that the motion of the B star and an accompanying Hα emission line require the presence of a dark companion with a mass of 68+11−13 solar masses, which can only be a black hole. The long orbital period of 78.9 days shows that this is a wide binary system. Gravitational-wave experiments have detected black holes of similar mass, but the formation of such massive ones in a high-metallicity environment would be extremely challenging within current stellar evolution theories.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1766-2
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/1911.11989
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