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Lynn Chandler: Okay. Good morning
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and welcome to the NASA press conference on the latest scientific
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discoveries from the Suzaku mission. I am Lynn Chandler and I am the
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press officer for the Suzaku mission and today we have with us
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Dr. Kim Weaver, Astrophysicist
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and Dr. Koji Mukai,
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Suzaku Guest Observer Facility Lead.
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And at this time
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time I would like to turn it over to our scientists for their presentations.
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Dr. Kim Weaver: Thanks Lynn. We're discussing a new result from the Suzaku
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X-ray satellite. For the first time, individual
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clouds of gas have been caught in the act orbiting a giant black hole
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at the center of a galaxy, this galaxy is named NGC 1365.
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The movements and shapes of such clouds have long
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been a mystery to astronomers. Remarkably these clouds have
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a shape similar to the comets that we see in our solar system.
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These clouds can also tell us a great deal about the extreme environments near
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black holes. The science technique used to study these clouds
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is called occultation or the blocking of x-ray light by the
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clouds themselves. An occultation is when an apparently larger body
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passes in front of a apparently smaller one. This happens for example
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when we see the moon pass in front of a star as it orbits the
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Earth. With Suzaku we have an occultation of a black hole
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by orbiting clouds of gas. This is only the second
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time an occultation in x-rays has been tracked so closely as to
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capture movements so near to a black hole but it's the first time
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such unique dimming of x-ray light has been seen that contains enough
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information to actually determine the shapes of the clouds themselves that make up
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the x-ray curtain in a galaxy. Koji will now tell us about
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Suzaku and its importance for this science, Koji. Dr. Koji Mukai: Thanks Kim.
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Suzaku is an x-ray astronomy satellite built by a
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collaboration between Japan and the U.S. and launched in July of 2005.
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You may not have heard of Suzaku before.
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If you heard about one x-ray astronomy mission, it's likely to be Chandra,
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which is justifiably famous for the exquisite x-ray images
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that it can capture, but there are other x-ray astronomy satellites
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satellites in orbit today. So why do we need more than one x-ray
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astronomy satellite? This is because it takes a lot of resources
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to build one satellite that can do everything that
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an x-ray astronomer would ever want to do. It makes sense
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for each project to focus on different aspects of
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x-ray astronomy and build a satellite that can do that
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aspect very well. In the case of Chandra it was the
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fine imaging ability, in the case of Suzaku,
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the team decided to focus on spectroscopy.
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Spectroscopy is the study of intensity of electromagnetic
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radiation, visible light, x-rays and so on, as a function
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of its wavelength or the energies of individual x-ray photons.
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One particular way that Suzaku excels is
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that it covers a wide range of x-ray energies. Suzaku
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has one type of instrument that can detect x-rays
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of the same energies that Chandra can study, but
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Suzaku carries another instrument which studies higher energy x-rays.
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So it's like seeing all the colors of the rainbow
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with Suzaku instead of just seeing oranges and reds.
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It also happens that higher-energy x-rays
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--bluer photons, so to speak--penetrate deeper
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into gas clouds and lower energy x-rays
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tend to get more absorbed. You can say that
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Suzaku and the supermassive black hole to x-ray
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the gas cloud orbiting around the NGC 1365, much like
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doctors do with your bones, which is actually quite rare
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in x-ray astronomy. This needed the
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Suzaku's ability to study x-rays,
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wide range of x-ray energies.
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Another reason why Suzaku was essential for this study, was that,
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we tend to stare at one object for a long time to
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build up the x-ray spectra because you need to
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collect enough photons at each energy to have a good spectrum.
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With short observations we would have missed
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some of the important moments of this occultation event,
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so that was another reason why Suzaku was
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important. I hope I've made it clear why Suzaku was
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a great tool for this research. I will now turn it back to Kim
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who will explain the significance of this scientific discovery. Dr. Kim Weaver: Thanks Koji.
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The black hole we are talking about is about two million times the mass
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of our sun. As material comes close to the black hole it heats
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up to about millions of degrees and gives off x-rays.
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Obscuration of x-rays by dense gas is seen in many galaxies
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but actual occultation by clouds themselves are rarely caught.
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One reason is that a galaxy must be observed for a long time,
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uninterrupted. It can be very hard to schedule such a long block of
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time on our telescopes but it does happen. This particular observation
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was three and a half days long, quite long. The graphic
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currently being shown, shows the intensity of x-ray
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light with time that was measured from this galaxy, and you
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can see a lot of variability in the x-ray light. Suzaku
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saw two distinct eclipsing events marked by the green lines.
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As you can see for each eclipse there is a sudden dimming in x-rays
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due to the transit of a dense cloud covering about sixty five percent of the x-ray
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source. The specific variability of x-ray light
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in NGC 1365 was fairly easy to find due to the
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way in which the galaxy is actually tilted with respect to how we see it.
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The tilt, this pretty high tilt, gives us a high chance of seeing through many clouds.
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Other galaxies could be tilted differently so it could be very hard
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to catch views of their clouds. It's possible that the events like
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this are simply very rare for astronomers to witness.
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The next graphic shows side-by-side pictures of an artist concept of the
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comet-like cloud passing in front of the black hole. A fast
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fade out of light, like we saw in the light curve before, means that the dense
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cold cloud has to have a sharp leading edge as we see here.
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On the left hand side you can see the dense cloud blocking the black
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hole itself. Slower dimming of the x-ray light over longer
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time indicates less dense gas streaming out behind the dense
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cloud like the tail of a comet, and you can see on the right hand side of the graphic
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now the comet part of the cloud is passing in front of it.
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The cloud geometry can be roughly sketched out. Scientists can
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only reconstruct the shape of the tail projected on to the plane of the
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sky; they can't actually determine the shape of the cloud along
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our direction. The next graphic shows the comet
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cloud in relation to our solar system, in relation to the sun-Earth
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distance. The length of the cloud's tail covers a distance
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at about the same as that between the earth and the sun and as you can see here in this
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artist's concept. As these clouds orbit the black hole they
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constantly loose mass and the expected lifetime
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of an individual cloud is only two months. Where
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does the gas go that is lost? It's probably not accreted
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or eaten by the black hole. It either heats up to ten million degrees
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and becomes part of a hot haze of gas that the clouds have to pass
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through, or the gas loss is caused by radiation pressure for the black hole
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and the gas becomes part of an out-flowing wind. About a
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tenth of a solar mass per year, which is many clouds' worth, could be lost
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this way. What are the clouds? This is unclear.
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Atmospheres of stars can produce mass loss that resembles tails
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but there are not nearly enough stars here to account for the number of clouds that are
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seen. The dense clouds are probably moving supersonically
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through a less dense haze. This would set up a system of shocks, like
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bow shocks. As the dense clouds plow through the regions of hot gas,
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the clouds erode, and the erosion creates the tails.
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Is a comet shape common for such clouds? Well that's not known.
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We need more observations of occulting events like this to understand these
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and other questions. Lynn Chandler: Thank you Kim and Koji.
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And that concludes our presentation portion of the press briefing today,
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and at this time we're going to take questions. We do have some callers
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on the phone and I ask that you specify which scientist you would like to
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answer your question. And our first caller is from Jeffrey
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a student in California. Jeffrey: This is for doctor Mukai.
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What information does the Suzaku mission seek to discover? And what are the most
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important purposes of this probe? Dr. Koji Mukai: Well one
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answer to this question is that Suzaku is a facility for the entire
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astronomical community. So the community decide what questions to
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to tackle and what objects to observe and so on. But
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we did have some overarching goals for the mission, when we built the
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mission. One is we'd like to study how
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various chemical elements are formed in the universe, and how they're dispersed.
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Another focus area is the study of matter and the
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extreme conditions such as these clouds right near a black hole.
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Lynn Chandler: Okay. And our second caller, Lauren
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is a student from Texas. Lauren: This is for Dr. Weaver. How large
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is a supersize black hole? What would a normal size black hole be like?
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Dr. Kim Weaver: A normal black hole we be the most common type that we see
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which are stellar mass black holes. A black hole that has the
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mass of about the mass of our sun would be about three miles across, so
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it would be very small, very tiny. A supersize
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black hole can be much, much larger and range from with sizes
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anywhere from a tenth of a distance between the earth and the sun to as
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large as our entire solar system put together.
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Lynn Chandler: Okay. And our next question comes from Bailey in Michigan.
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Bailey: This is for Dr. Weaver. Approximately how big is the black holes
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diameter, and are there black holes bigger than this one?
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Dr. Kim Weaver: Yes. There are black holes bigger than this one. There are many
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in fact, you can a have black holes with masses that are up to a billion
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times the mass of the sun, so one hundred times more
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massive than this black hole. And a black hole like that would be about
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one hundred times larger, and again that would be roughly the size of our
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solar system. Lynn Chandler: Okay. And our next question comes
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from Brittney in New York. Brittney: For Dr. Mukai.
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Why is Suzaku called the red bird of the south?
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Dr. Koji Mukai: That's a very interesting question. The first x-ray
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astronomy satellite launched by our Japanese colleagues was called Hakucho,
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which is the Japanese name for the constellation Cygnus or swan.
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So that started the tradition of naming the x-ray astronomy satellites
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after flying creatures. The fourth one was called ASCA,
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which was an acronym but also meant a flying bird
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and it also was the name of an ancient
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Japanese era. So for
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their fifth x-ray astronomy satellite they picked Suzaku, which
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not only means "the red bird of the south", but it's also a name
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of another era in Japanese history. Lynn Chandler: Okay. And our next
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question come from Madeline, a student from Louisiana.
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Madeline: This is for Dr. Weaver. In what ways are clouds detected around the black
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hole comparable to those observed in our own solar system?
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Dr. Kim Weaver: Well clouds in our solar system are like the clouds that we see in our--
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Earth's--atmosphere. So the way in which their similar; when you look up
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in the sky and it's a cloudy day, the clouds are blocking the sun's light
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from us to see, these clouds are similar in that they are blocking
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the x-ray light in the galaxy. Lynn Chandler: And our last question today
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comes from Andrew in Virginia. Andrew: This one is for Dr. Weaver.
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What's the importance of this finding for astronomy?
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Dr. Kim Weaver: Well Koji mentioned one importance and that's understanding the extreme environments
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around black holes, but another thing that's really interesting about this is that
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black holes generally are thought of as gobbling up material that comes
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near them, and eating stuff that flies by,
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never to be seen again. But in this case we're actually understanding material
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that's going to be going away from the black hole, being pushed away from the
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black hole in an out-flowing wind. So we're using this
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experiment to understand things that move away
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from the black hole and thus are a part of the entire system of
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the black hole galaxy environment.
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Lynn Chandler: Okay. Thank you for joining us today and this concludes
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our NASA press briefing on the Suzaku mission.
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