Positions from Swift's XRT constrained the  source to a small patch of sky that contains a faint galaxy known to be  3.9 billion light-years away. But to link the Swift event to the galaxy  required observations at radio wavelengths, which showed that the  galaxy's center contained a brightening radio source. Analysis of that  source using the Expanded Very Large Array and Very Long Baseline  Interferometry (VLBI) shows that it is still expanding at more than half  the speed of light. 
 Two studies appearing in the Aug. 25 issue of the journal Nature  provide new insights into a cosmic accident that has been streaming  X-rays toward Earth since late March. NASA's Swift satellite first  alerted astronomers to intense and unusual high-energy flares from the  new source in the constellation Draco.
"Incredibly, this source is still producing X-rays and may remain  bright enough for Swift to observe into next year," said David Burrows,  professor of astronomy at Penn State University and lead scientist for  the mission's X-Ray Telescope instrument. "It behaves unlike anything  we've seen before."
Astronomers soon realized the source, known as Swift J1644+57, was  the result of a truly extraordinary event -- the awakening of a distant  galaxy's dormant black hole as it shredded and consumed a star. The  galaxy is so far away, it took the light from the event approximately  3.9 billion years to reach Earth.
Burrows' study included NASA scientists. It highlights the X- and  gamma-ray observations from Swift and other detectors, including the  Japan-led Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image (MAXI) instrument aboard the International Space Station.
The second study was led by Ashley Zauderer, a post-doctoral fellow  at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass.  It examines the unprecedented outburst through observations from  numerous ground-based radio observatories, including the National Radio  Astronomy Observatory's Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) near Socorro, N.M.
Most galaxies, including our own, possess a central supersized black  hole weighing millions of times the sun's mass. According to the new  studies, the black hole in the galaxy hosting Swift J1644+57 may be  twice the mass of the four-million-solar-mass black hole in the center  of the Milky Way galaxy. 
As a star falls toward a black hole, it is ripped apart by intense  tides. The gas is corralled into a disk that swirls around the black  hole and becomes rapidly heated to temperatures of millions of degrees. 
 The innermost gas in the disk spirals toward the black hole, where rapid  motion and magnetism create dual, oppositely directed "funnels" through  which some particles may escape. Jets driving matter at velocities  greater than 90 percent the speed of light form along the black hole's  spin axis. In the case of Swift J1644+57, one of these jets happened to  point straight at Earth.
Swift's X-Ray Telescope continues to record  high-energy flares from Swift J1644+57 more than three months after the  source's first appearance. Astronomers believe that this behavior  represents the slow depletion of gas in an accretion disk around a  supermassive black hole. The first flares from the source likely  coincided with the disk's creation, thought to have occurred when a star  wandering too close to the black hole was torn apart. 
"The radio emission occurs when the outgoing  jet slams into the interstellar environment," Zauderer explained. "By  contrast, the X-rays arise much closer to the black hole, likely near  the base of the jet."
Theoretical studies of tidally disrupted stars suggested they would  appear as flares at optical and ultraviolet energies. The brightness and  energy of a black hole's jet is greatly enhanced when viewed head-on.  The phenomenon, called relativistic beaming, explains why Swift J1644+57  was seen at X-ray energies and appeared so strikingly luminous.
When first detected March 28, the flares were initially assumed to  signal a gamma-ray burst, one of the nearly daily short blasts of  high-energy radiation often associated with the death of a massive star  and the birth of a black hole in the distant universe. But as the  emission continued to brighten and flare, astronomers realized that the  most plausible explanation was the tidal disruption of a sun-like star  seen as beamed emission.
By March 30, EVLA observations by Zauderer's team showed a  brightening radio source centered on a faint galaxy near Swift's  position for the X-ray flares. These data provided the first conclusive  evidence that the galaxy, the radio source and the Swift event were  linked.
Images from Swift's Ultraviolet/Optical  (white, purple) and X-Ray telescopes (yellow and red) were combined to  make this view of Swift J1644+57. Evidence of the flares is seen only in  the X-ray image, which is a 3.4-hour exposure taken on March 28, 2011. 
"Our observations show that the  radio-emitting region is still expanding at more than half the speed of  light," said Edo Berger, an associate professor of astrophysics at  Harvard and a coauthor of the radio paper. 
"By tracking this expansion  backward in time, we can confirm that the outflow formed at the same  time as the Swift X-ray source." Swift, launched in November 2004, is managed by NASA's Goddard Space  Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. It is operated in collaboration with  Penn State, the Los Alamos National Laboratory in N.M. and Orbital  Sciences Corp., in Dulles, Va., with international collaborators in the  U.K., Italy, Germany and Japan. MAXI is operated by the Japan Aerospace  Exploration Agency as an external experiment attached to the Kibo module  of the space station.
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