Homing In On Black Holes
To gain insight into the most mysterious objects in the universe, astronomers shine a light at the chaotic core of our Milky Way
- By Robert Irion
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2008, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
These young stars will self-destruct a few million years from now. And when they do, the most massive ones will leave behind small black holes. Morris theorizes that hundreds of thousands of these stellar-mass black holes, accumulated from past generations of stars, swarm around the central, supermassive black hole. The stellar-mass black holes are only about 20 miles wide, so collisions between them would be rare. Instead, Morris says, "You'll have black holes swinging past each other in the night, and stars moving through this destruction derby. A near miss between one of the black holes and a star could scatter the star into the supermassive black hole or out of the galactic center entirely." Theorists think the supermassive black hole may gobble a star once every tens of thousands of years—an event that would flood the center of the galaxy with radiation. "It would be a spectacular event," Morris says.
Astronomers see signs of such gobbling when they examine the Milky Way's interior with X-ray and radio telescopes, which detect the shock waves of past explosions. Giant black holes in other galaxies are too far away for astronomers to study in such depth, says Avi Loeb, director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That's why he hangs on every announcement from the Ghez and Genzel teams. "The advances made by the observers in such a short time have been truly remarkable," he says. "We theorists are all cheerleaders for them."
Loeb and others are painting a new picture of how the universe and its 100 billion galaxies evolved since the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago. They believe that all galaxies started with as-yet-unexplained "seed" black holes—tens to thousands of times the mass of our sun—that grew exponentially during violent feeding cycles when galaxies collided, which they did more frequently when the universe was younger and galaxies were closer together. In a collision, some stars catapult into deep space and other stars and gases plummet into the newly combined black hole at the galaxies' center. As the black hole grows, Loeb says, it turns into a raging quasar with gas heated to billions of degrees. The quasar then blasts the rest of the gas out of the galaxy entirely. After the gas is depleted, Loeb says, "the supermassive black hole sits at the center of the galaxy, dormant and starved."
It appears that our Milky Way, with its modest-sized black hole, has absorbed only a few smaller galaxies and has never fueled a quasar. However, a fearsome collision looms. The closest large galaxy, called Andromeda, is on a collision course with the Milky Way. The two will start to merge about two billion years from now, gradually forming a massive galaxy that Loeb and his former Harvard-Smithsonian colleague T. J. Cox call "Milkomeda." The galaxies' supermassive central black holes will collide, devouring torrents of gas and igniting a new quasar for a short time in this sedate part of the universe. "We are late bloomers in that regard," Loeb notes. "It happened to most other galaxies early on." (Earth won't get thrown out of the Sun's orbit by the collision and it shouldn't be whacked by anything during the merger. But there will be a lot more stars in the sky.)
Our galaxy's disturbing future aside, Loeb hopes that soon—perhaps within a decade—we'll have the first image of the Milky Way's supermassive black hole, thanks to an emerging global network of "millimeter wave" telescopes. Named for the wavelength of the radio waves they detect, the instruments won't actually see the black hole itself. Rather, in concert they'll map the shadow it casts on a curtain of hot gas behind it. If all goes well, the shadow will have a distinctive shape. Some theorists expect the black hole to be spinning. If so, according to the counterintuitive dragging of space predicted by Einstein, our view of the shadow will be distorted into something like a lopsided and squashed teardrop. "It would be the most remarkable picture we could have," says Loeb.
On the fourth and final night of Ghez's planned observations, wind and fog at the Mauna Kea summit keep the telescope domes closed. So the astronomers review their data from previous nights. Images from the first two nights ranged from good to excellent, says Ghez; the third night was "respectable." She's says she's content: her students have enough to keep them busy, and Tuan Do from the University of California at Irvine identified a few big, young stars to add to the team's analysis. "I feel incredibly privileged to work at something I have this much fun at," Ghez says. "It's hard to believe that black holes really exist, because it's such an exotic state of the universe. We've been able to demonstrate it, and I find that really profound."
She spends most of her time overseeing the command center at Waimea, but she has been to the top of Mauna Kea to see the laser in action. As we talk about the mesmerizing sight, it is clear that Ghez appreciates an irony: astronomers love the dark and often complain about any source of light that might interfere with their observations. Yet here they are, casting a beacon of light into the heavens to help illuminate the blackest thing humanity can ever hope to see.
This story by Robert Irion won the American Astronomical Society's 2010 David N. Schramm Award for Science Journalism.
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Comments (45)
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I do hope the day will come when serious scientists stop teaching that nothing can escape the gravitational pull of a black hole. I have not read this anywhere else but bipolar black hole high energy jets travel well beyond the gravitational pull of the black hole they came from, having been gravitationally been drawn in from an accretion disc in the first place. Its self evident from the information already available on black holes
Posted by Andrew Planet on August 17,2012 | 12:51 PM
who ever figured this out is really,really smart.My name is Kaylee Ann Miller,and Morgan Kristian McDonald.
Posted by on January 31,2009 | 08:51 PM
could it be possible black holes are a funnel affect such as sink drain produces? could it be possible the universe as we know it know is acutally a blanket around an inner world we know nothing of with immense storms that create these funnels pulling pieces of our univers in to it? could it have a black atmosphere so thick we cant detect it? could it be possible they are both spining around in their own gravitanol field in a ball in space with other worlds like them?
Posted by henry lee foster on December 29,2008 | 08:43 AM
awesome!!
Posted by Danielle on December 8,2008 | 01:08 PM
I want to know why black holes are what they are. I mean why do they happen & exist? Is there EVER going to be a black hole that will destroy the sun and earth? When?
Posted by Gina on October 24,2008 | 03:56 PM
All galaxies in the space continuum have a black hole, or remnent of a black hole at the center. It would be theoretically highly unusual to find a galaxy in the Universe, that did not have a negative star (black hole) at the center. Therefore, it is understandable to find a black holes at the center axis of rotating spiral galaxies, they are the only gravitational influence that can attract, and rotate that much mass in the known Universe of mankind. Theoretically speaking, binary black holes may be found at the center axis of large rotating spiral galaxies. SPR
Posted by S. P. Robertson on September 22,2008 | 10:34 AM
Fascinating piece of reporting on this brilliant work. But, what is on the other side of a black hole? Is there a parallel universe or oblivion or ??? I love contemplating these things.
Posted by David Kulaas on September 16,2008 | 01:27 PM
Could the prevalence of young stars near the black hole be due to smaller masses being easier to attract by the hole's gravity? The young stars (with less mass) could be more easily accelerated because there is less gravitational force from other nearby stars that would otherwise tug the new stars away from the hole ( the older, more massive stars hold each other out of harms way). The gravitational force is thought to be proportional to the 2 masses, but the theories of gravity are just theories, and they may not work in such hole-induced distortions in space/time. For example, what happens if the mass (of the black hole) approaches infinity? The masses of the objects near it would be irrelevant, would they not? And if so, perhaps other unique characteristics of the young star (e.g. rotation, dust drag, elemental make up, etc) now become influential to the black hole.
Posted by Kevin Keating on September 16,2008 | 12:17 PM
wow! Amazing!! I'm studying black holes and may have found the perfect thing. oh and some people say if you go into or close to a black hole you'll get sucked in and stretched. Some scientists call this being "Spaghetified".
Posted by Alexis on September 13,2008 | 05:34 PM
Black Holes???? Lets figure out a better name! They are not black! Prodigious amounts of light is produced its just we do not see it! Its all kept inside! what a brillent place it must be inside and in no way are they a hole nothing is missing. I would porpose "Great One" as an alternate name. Jim
Posted by Jim Spens on August 19,2008 | 10:47 AM
200 billion stars in the Milky Way?? Was that not the estimates of years ago? Are there not 500 billion 700 billion or more??? Jim
Posted by jim spens on August 19,2008 | 10:41 AM
I recently plowed far enough through the "phonebook" GRAVITATION to the point where they explain how to compute the last time, by your clock, that you, a far-away observer, can send a signal (radio, light) to an object falling into a black hole to cause it to go into "rescue mode" (fire a super-powerful engine, engage a STAR TRECK trnaporter, whatever) to save all or part of itself from falling into the hole and coming back to you, eventually. The signal ends up in the in-falling object's time frame, which has a definite time of falling in, even though, you, the far-away observer, will never see that drop-dead point where the object hits the event horizon and is gone forever (at least in one piece). However, since you never see any of this since it takes going faster than light to see inside a black hole, how can you ever see ANYTHING happen after a black hole forms? By "anything" I mean things like changing its motion due to the gravitational attaction of another object (star, for example) that comes close, and so on. To change this momentum, you have to alter the motion of the singularity at its center. This not only should take forever to see, but how does gravity or any other force "grab" an infinitely-dense singularity to make it do anything at all (even gravitons have some size, I assume)? I realize that quantum effects may change this, but, for now, I am assuming classic General Relativity. Somebody please explain how any changes can happen or, the same thing, be observed in a finite time, as seen by a far-away observer (somebody who is not suicidal!).
Posted by Nathan Okun on August 13,2008 | 12:02 AM
what an amaizing gallery..
Posted by adarsh mohan on July 6,2008 | 04:48 AM
Is the budget for space research astronomically (pun intended) high? Possibly, yes. But as others have pointed out, there are many, many other ways researchers and government officials have wasted money on futile research. However, I think this is the stuff man dreams about. The biggest and most important questions arise from studying the universe: Are we alone? What is our galactic fate? Any answer carries huge implications. And the beauty of the heavens is astounding. For me, space study is not just science, but aesthetics, philosophy, and theology. The wonder of our universe is never ending.
Posted by KB on June 25,2008 | 03:40 PM
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