Did you know some of the brightest sources of light in the sky come from the regions around black holes in the centers of galaxies? It sounds a little contradictory, but it’s true! They may not look bright to our eyes, but satellites have spotted oodles of them across the universe.
One of those satellites is NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. Fermi has found thousands of these kinds of galaxies since it launched
in 2008, and there are many more out there!
Watch a cosmic gamma-ray fireworks show in this
animation using just a year of data from the Large Area Telescope (LAT) aboard
NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. Each object’s magenta circle grows as
it brightens and shrinks as it dims. The yellow circle represents the Sun
following its apparent annual path across the sky. The animation shows a subset
of the LAT gamma-ray records available for more than 1,500 objects in a
continually updated repository. Over 90% of these sources are a type of galaxy
called a blazar, powered by the activity of a supermassive black hole.
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center/Daniel Kocevski
Black
holes are
regions of space that have so much gravity that nothing — not light, not
particles, nada — can escape. Most galaxies have supermassive black holes at their centers, and these black holes
are hundreds of thousands to billions of times the mass of our Sun. In active galactic nuclei (also called “AGN” for short, or just
"active galaxies") the central region is stuffed with gas and dust
that's constantly falling toward the black hole. As the gas and dust fall,
they start to spin and form a disk. Because of the friction and other forces at
work, the spinning disk starts to heat up.
This composite view of the active galaxy Markarian 573
combines X-ray data (blue) from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and radio
observations (purple) from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array in New Mexico
with a visible light image (gold) from the Hubble Space Telescope. Markarian
573 is an active galaxy that has two cones of emission streaming away from the
supermassive black hole at its center.
X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO/A.Paggi et al; Optical:
NASA/STScI; Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA
The disk's heat gets emitted as light, but not just wavelengths of it that
we can see with our eyes. We detect light from AGN across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from the more familiar radio and optical waves
through to the more exotic X-rays and gamma rays, which we need special telescopes to spot.
In the heart of an active galaxy, matter falling
toward a supermassive black hole creates jets of particles traveling near the
speed of light as shown in this artist’s concept.
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
About one in 10 AGN beam out jets of energetic particles, which are
traveling almost as fast as light. Scientists are studying these jets to try to
understand how black holes — which pull everything in with their huge amounts
of gravity — somehow provide the energy needed to propel the particles in these
jets.
This artist’s concept shows two views of the active
galaxy TXS 0128+554, located around 500 million light-years away. Left: The
galaxy’s central jets appear as they would if we viewed them both at the same
angle. The black hole, embedded in a disk of dust and gas, launches a pair of
particle jets traveling at nearly the speed of light. Scientists think gamma
rays (magenta) detected by NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope originate
from the base of these jets. As the jets collide with material surrounding the
galaxy, they form identical lobes seen at radio wavelengths (orange). The jets
experienced two distinct bouts of activity, which created the gap between the
lobes and the black hole. Right: The galaxy appears in its actual orientation,
with its jets tipped out of our line of sight by about 50 degrees.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Many of the ways we tell one type of AGN from another depend on how they’re
oriented from our point of view. With radio galaxies, for example, we see the
jets from the side as they’re beaming vast amounts of energy into space. Then
there’s blazars, which are a type of AGN that have a jet that is pointed almost directly
at Earth, which makes the AGN particularly bright.
Blazar 3C 279's historic gamma-ray flare in 2015 can
be seen in this image from the Large Area Telescope on NASA's Fermi satellite.
During the flare, the blazar outshone the Vela pulsar, usually the brightest
object in the gamma-ray sky.
NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration
Fermi has been searching the sky for gamma ray sources since 2008. More
than half of the sources it has found have been blazars. Gamma rays are useful
because they can tell us a lot about how particles accelerate and how they
interact with their environment.
So why do we care about AGN? We know that some AGN formed early in the history of the universe. With their enormous power, they almost certainly affected how the universe changed over time. By discovering how AGN work, we can understand better how the universe came to be the way it is now.
Source: The Universe's Brightest Lights Have Some Dark Origins - NASA Science




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