Dubai Tech News

Supermassive black hole accidentally captured; See pics

Supermassive black hole accidentally captured; See pics PTI Updated: April 8th, 2023, 07:20 IST in Sci-Tech 0 Pic credit- https://hubblesite. org/ Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on WhatsApp Share on Linkedin New Delhi: A supermassive black hole, weighing as much as 20 million Suns, has left behind a 2,00,000-light-year-long condensed trail of newborn stars, twice the diameter of the Milky Way galaxy, in its wake, according to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), US. Runaway black hole near RCP 28 (Pic credit: https://hubblesite.

org/) Captured accidentally by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, the black hole was seen racing through the intergalactic space so fast that, within our solar system, it could travel from Earth to the Moon in 14 minutes. “We think we’re seeing a wake behind the black hole where the gas cools and is able to form stars. So, we’re looking at star formation trailing the black hole,” said Pieter van Dokkum of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, US.

“What we’re seeing is the aftermath. Like the wake behind a ship, we’re seeing the wake behind the black hole,” said van Dokkum. The researchers have published their paper in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Runaway black hole compass image (Pic Credit- https://hubblesite. org/) They said that the black hole lies at one end of the column, at the other end of which lies its parent galaxy. They think that the gas is being ‘shocked’ and heated from the motion of the black hole hitting the gas, or it could be radiation from an accretion disk around the black hole.

“This is pure serendipity that we stumbled across it,” van Dokkum added. He was looking for globular star clusters in a nearby dwarf galaxy. “I was just scanning through the Hubble image and then I noticed that we have a little streak.

I immediately thought, ‘oh, a cosmic ray hitting the camera detector and causing a linear imaging artifact. ’ When we eliminated cosmic rays we realized it was still there. It didn’t look like anything we’ve seen before,” said van Dokkum.

Van Dokkum and his team followed up the sight with spectroscopy with the W. M. Keck Observatories in Hawaii.

The star trail being “quite astonishing, very, very bright and very unusual” made them conclude that they were looking at the aftermath of a black hole flying through a halo of gas surrounding the host galaxy. Astronomers suspect this phenomenon to likely be the result of multiple collisions of supermassive black holes, the first two having perhaps merged 50 million years ago. Brought together closer at their centres, they whirled around each other as a binary black hole, they said.

Then came another galaxy with its own supermassive black hole, mixing up the three to form a chaotic and an unstable configuration. One of the black holes robbed momentum from the other two black holes and got thrown out of the host galaxy, they said. Following this, the remaining binary system of black holes shot off in the opposite direction, they said.

There is a feature seen on the opposite side of the host galaxy that might be the runaway binary black hole. Circumstantial evidence for this is that there is no sign of an active black hole remaining at the galaxy’s core, they said. The next step, they said, would be to do follow-up observations with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory to confirm the black hole explanation.

PTI Tags: blackhole Hubble NASA space US Share Tweet Send Share Suggest A Correction Enter your email to get our daily news in your inbox. Leave this field empty if you’re human: Related Posts India’s rising Covid cases: Experts say common cold-like spread suggests endemicity, urge precaution April 7, 2023 Indian consumer tech space sees huge value creation with $250 billion in valuation April 7, 2023 DALL-E powered Microsoft Edge’s AI image generator now available on desktop April 7, 2023 Apple to shut its online services on these devices April 7, 2023 Annoyed with Twitter ads? Do this instead April 7, 2023 TikTok may be bad for privacy, but is it also harming our cognitive abilities? April 7, 2023 Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Comment * Name * Email * Website Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Δ.


From: orissapost
URL: https://www.orissapost.com/supermassive-black-hole-accidentally-captured-see-pics/

Exit mobile version