Surprise! Monster Black Hole Found in Dwarf Galaxy
news.yahoo.com
By by
Charles Q. Choi, SPACE.com Contributor
Astronomers
have just discovered the smallest known galaxy that harbors a huge,
supermassive black hole at its core.
The
relatively nearby dwarf galaxy may house a supermassive black
hole at its heart equal in mass to about 21 million suns. The
discovery suggests that supermassive black holes may be far more common than
previously thought.
A
supermassive black hole millions to billions of times the mass of the sun lies
at the heart of nearly every large galaxy like the Milky Way. These monstrously
huge black holes have existed since the infancy of the universe, some 800
million years or so after the Big Bang. Scientists are uncertain whether dwarf
galaxies might also harbor supermassive black holes. [Watch
a Space.com video about the new dwarf galaxy finding]
"Dwarf
galaxies usually refer to any galaxy less than roughly one-fiftieth the
brightness of the Milky Way," said lead study author Anil Seth, an
astronomer at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. These galaxies span
only several hundreds to thousands of light-years across, much smaller than the
Milky Way's 100,000-light-year diameter, and they "are much more abundant
than galaxies like the Milky Way," Seth said.
The
researchers investigated a rarer kind of dwarf galaxy known as an ultra-compact
dwarf galaxy; such galaxies are among the densest collections of stars in the
universe. "These are found primarily in galaxy clusters, the cities of the
universe," Seth told Space.com.
Now, Seth
and his colleagues have discovered that an ultra-compactdwarf
galaxy may possess a supermassive black hole, which would make it the
smallest galaxy known to contain such a giant.
The
astronomers investigated M60-UCD1, the brightest ultra-compact dwarf galaxy
currently known, using the Gemini North 8-meter optical-and-infrared telescope
on Hawaii's Mauna Kea volcano and NASA's Hubble
Space Telescope. M60-UCD1 lies about 54 million light-years away from
Earth. The dwarf galaxy orbits M60, one of the largest galaxies near the Milky
Way, at a distance of only about 22,000 light-years from the larger galaxy's
center, "closer than the sun is to the center of the Milky Way," Seth
said.
The
scientists calculated the size of the supermassive black hole that may lurk
inside M60-UCD1 by analyzing the motions of the stars in that galaxy, which
helped the researchers deduce the amount of mass needed to exert the
gravitational field seen pulling on those stars. For instance, the stars at the
center of M60-UCD1 zip at speeds of about 230,000 mph (370,000 km/h), much
faster than stars would be expected to move in the absence of such a black
hole.
The
supermassive black hole at the core of the
Milky Way has a mass of about 4 million suns, taking up less than 0.01
percent of the galaxy's estimated total mass, which is about 50 billion suns.
In comparison, the supermassive black hole that may lie in the core of M60-UCD1
appears five times larger than the one in the Milky Way, and also seems to make
up about 15 percent of the dwarf galaxy's mass, which is about 140 million
suns.
"That
is pretty amazing, given that the Milky Way is 500 times larger and more than
1,000 times heavier than the dwarf galaxy M60-UCD1," Seth said in a
statement.
Astronomers
have debated the nature of ultra-compact dwarf galaxies for years — whether
they were extremely massive clusters of stars that were all born together, or
whether they were the centers or nuclei of large galaxies that had their outer
layers stripped away during collisions
with other galaxies. These new findings hint that ultra-compact dwarf
galaxies are the stripped nuclei of larger galaxies, because star clusters do
not host supermassive black holes.
The
researchers suggest M60-UCD1 was once a very large galaxy, with maybe 10
billion stars, "but then it passed very close to the center of an even
larger galaxy, M60, and in that process, all the stars and dark matter in the
outer part of the galaxy got torn away and became part of M60," Seth said
in a statement. "That was maybe as much as 10 billion years ago. We don't
know."
Eventually,
M60-UCD1 "may merge with the center of M60, which has a monster black hole
in it, with 4.5 billion solar masses — more than 1,000 times bigger than the
supermassive black hole in our galaxy," Seth said in a statement.
"When that happens, the black
hole we found in M60-UCD1 will merge with that monster black
hole."
The
astronomers suggest the way stars move in many other ultra-compact dwarf
galaxies hints that they may host supermassive black holes, as well. All in
all, the scientists suggest that ultra-compact dwarf galaxies could double the
number of supermassive black holes known in the nearby regions of the universe.
The researchers are participating in ongoing projects that may provide
conclusive evidence for supermassive black holes in four other ultra-compact
dwarfs.
The scientists
detailed their findings in the Sept. 18 issue of the journal Nature.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/surprise-monster-black-hole-found-dwarf-galaxy-173859016.html
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