Precessing jet nozzle connecting to a spinning black hole in M87.
Yuzhu CuiKazuhiro HadaTomohisa KawashimaMotoki KinoWeikang LinYosuke MizunoHyunwook RoMareki HonmaKunwoo YiJintao YuJongho ParkWu JiangZhiqiang ShenEvgeniya KravchenkoJuan Carlos AlgabaXiaopeng ChengIlje ChoGabriele GiovanniniMarcello GirolettiTaehyun JungRu-Sen LuKotaro NiinumaJunghwan OhKen OhsugaSatoko Sawada-SatohBong Won SohnHiroyuki R TakahashiMieko TakamuraFumie TazakiSascha TrippeKiyoaki WajimaKazunori AkiyamaTao AnKeiichi AsadaSalvatore ButtaccioDo-Young ByunLang CuiYoshiaki HagiwaraTomoya HirotaJeffrey HodgsonNoriyuki KawaguchiJae-Young KimSang-Sung LeeJee Won LeeJeong Ae LeeGiuseppe MaccaferriAndrea MelisAlexey MelnikovCarlo MigoniSe-Jin OhKoichiro SugiyamaXuezheng WangYingkang ZhangZhong ChenJu-Yeon HwangDong-Kyu JungHyo-Ryoung KimJeong-Sook KimHideyuki KobayashiBin LiGuanghui LiXiaofei LiZhiyong LiuQinghui LiuXiang LiuChung-Sik OhTomoaki OyamaDuk-Gyoo RohJinqing WangNa WangShiqiang WangBo XiaHao YanJae-Hwan YeomYoshinori YonekuraJianping YuanHua ZhangRongbing ZhaoWeiye ZhongPublished in: Nature (2023)
The nearby radio galaxy M87 offers a unique opportunity to explore the connections between the central supermassive black hole and relativistic jets. Previous studies of the inner region of M87 revealed a wide opening angle for the jet originating near the black hole 1-4 . The Event Horizon Telescope resolved the central radio source and found an asymmetric ring structure consistent with expectations from general relativity 5 . With a baseline of 17 years of observations, there was a shift in the jet's transverse position, possibly arising from an 8- to 10-year quasi-periodicity 3 . However, the origin of this sideways shift remains unclear. Here we report an analysis of radio observations over 22 years that suggests a period of about 11 years for the variation in the position angle of the jet. We infer that we are seeing a spinning black hole that induces the Lense-Thirring precession of a misaligned accretion disk. Similar jet precession may commonly occur in other active galactic nuclei but has been challenging to detect owing to the small magnitude and long period of the variation.