With the help of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, an international team of researchers led by scientists in the Department of Astronomy at Stockholm University has found more black holes in the early universe than has previously been reported. The new result can help scientists understand how supermassive black holes were created.
Currently, scientists do not have a complete picture of how the first
black holes formed not long after the big bang. It is known that supermassive
black holes, that can weigh more than a billion suns, exist at the center of
several galaxies less than a billion years after the big bang.
"Many of these objects seem to be more massive than we originally
thought they could be at such early times — either they formed very massive or
they grew extremely quickly," said Alice Young, a PhD student from
Stockholm University and co-author of the study published in The
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
This is a new image of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field.
The first deep imaging of the field was done with Hubble in 2004. The same
survey field was observed again by Hubble several years later, and was then
reimaged in 2023. By comparing Hubble Wide Field Camera 3 near-infrared
exposures taken in 2009, 2012, and 2023, astronomers found evidence for
flickering supermassive black holes in the hearts of early galaxies. One
example is seen as a bright object in the inset. Some supermassive black holes
do not swallow surrounding material constantly, but in fits and bursts, making
their brightness flicker. This can be detected by comparing Hubble Ultra Deep
Field frames taken at different epochs. The survey found more black holes than
predicted.
NASA, ESA, Matthew Hayes (Stockholm University);
Acknowledgment: Steven V.W. Beckwith (UC Berkeley), Garth Illingworth (UC Santa
Cruz), Richard Ellis (UCL); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
Black holes play an important role in the lifecycle of all galaxies, but there are major uncertainties in our understanding of how galaxies evolve. In order to gain a complete picture of the link between galaxy and black hole evolution, the researchers used Hubble to survey how many black holes exist among a population of faint galaxies when the universe was just a few percent of its current age.
Initial observations of the survey region were re-photographed by Hubble after several years. This allowed the team to measure variations in the brightness of galaxies. These variations are a telltale sign of black holes. The team identified more black holes than previously found by other methods.
The new observational results suggest that some black holes likely formed by the collapse of massive, pristine stars during the first billion years of cosmic time. These types of stars can only exist at very early times in the universe, because later-generation stars are polluted by the remnants of stars that have already lived and died. Other alternatives for black hole formation include collapsing gas clouds, mergers of stars in massive clusters, and "primordial" black holes that formed (by physically speculative mechanisms) in the first few seconds after the big bang. With this new information about black hole formation, more accurate models of galaxy formation can be constructed.
"The formation mechanism of early black holes is an important part of the puzzle of galaxy evolution," said Matthew Hayes from the Department of Astronomy at Stockholm University and lead author of the study. "Together with models for how black holes grow, galaxy evolution calculations can now be placed on a more physically motivated footing, with an accurate scheme for how black holes came into existence from collapsing massive stars."
For more information: Supermassive Black Holes in Hubble Ultra Deep Field follow link below.
Source: NASA's
Hubble Finds More Black Holes than Expected in the Early Universe - NASA
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