Simons Foundation shows a late-stage galaxy merger and its two newly-discovered central black holes. The binary black holes are the closest together ever observed in multiple wavelengths. Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO); M. Weiss, NRAO/AUI/NSF
The newfound pair of supermassive black holes
are the closest to colliding ever seen, the astronomers announced on
January 9 at an American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle and
in a paper (UGC
4211 - A Confirmed Dual Active Galactic Nucleus in the Local
Universe at 230 pc Nuclear Separation) published in The
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
In the meantime, the astronomers' discovery provides
a better estimate of how many
supermassive black holes are also
nearing collision in the universe.
Detecting that gravitational-wave background will
improve estimates of how many galaxies have collided and merged in
the universe's history.
This artist's conception shows a late-stage galaxy merger and its two newly-discovered central black holes. The binary black holes are the closest together ever observed in multiple wavelengths. Credit: ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO), M. Koss et al (Eureka Scientific), S. Dagnello (NRAO/AUI/NSF)
(Although supermassive black holes aren't directly
visible through an optical telescope, they are surrounded by bright
bunches of luminous stars and warm gas drawn in by their
gravitational pull.)
The newly identified supermassive black holes inhabit a mash-up of two galaxies that collided around 480 million light-years away from Earth.
Gargantuan black holes live in the heart of most galaxies, growing bigger by gobbling up surrounding gas, dust, stars and even other black holes.
The two supermassive black holes identified in this study are true heavyweights:
The black holes met as their host galaxies smashed into each other.
Eventually they will begin circling each other, with the orbit tightening as gas and stars pass between the two black holes and steal orbital energy.
Ultimately the black holes will start
producing
gravitational waves far stronger than any that have
previously been detected, before crashing into each other to form
one jumbo-size black hole.
The new survey, led by Michael J. Koss of Eureka Scientific in Oakland, California, combined 12 observations made on seven telescopes on Earth and in orbit.
Although no single
observation was enough to confirm their existence, the combined data
conclusively revealed two distinct black holes.
supermassive black holes on a collision course. Their host galaxy, left, is a mash-up of two galaxies that have collided. The pink box shows the location of the supermassive black holes. Close observation of the pair, right, reveals two distinct black holes (white spots) only 750 light-years apart. Credit: M.J. Koss et al.
She and Flatiron Institute visiting scientist Andrew Casey-Clyde used the new observations to estimate the universe's population of merging supermassive black holes, finding that it "may be surprisingly high," Mingarelli says.
They predict that an abundance of supermassive black-hole pairs exists, generating a major amount of ultra-strong gravitational waves. All that clamor should result in a loud gravitational-wave background far easier to detect than if the population were smaller.
The first ever detection of the background
babble of gravitational waves, therefore, may come "very soon," Mingarelli says.
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