Astronomers discover earliest black holes at dawn of universe
Astronomers have been peering farther and farther into space, and back in time, using the world's most powerful telescopes to detect galaxies billions of light years away that existed when the universe was just a fraction of its current age. But detecting the giant black holes thought to lurk at the centers of those galaxies has proven much more difficult. Now a team of astronomers has discovered the earliest black holes ever detected, despite the fact that they are hidden from view by their host galaxies. They also measured the average growth rate of the black holes and discovered that they grow and evolve in tandem with their galaxies – something that astronomers had observed locally but which they knew little about when it came to the early, distant universe.
"This finding tells us there is a symbiotic relationship between black holes and their galaxies that has existed since the dawn of time," said Kevin Schawinski, a Yale astronomer who contributed to the discovery.
The team used a technique called "stacking" in order to detect the incredibly weak signals emitted by the galaxies' central black holes, the farthest of which are 13 billion light years from Earth. Because of their great distance, astronomers see these black holes as they existed less than one billion years after the Big Bang. (The universe is currently estimated to be about 13.7 billion years old.)
The astronomers focused on more than 250 galaxies, which had previously been detected by the Hubble Space Telescope and which they thought were good candidates for harboring black holes at their centers. They then piled multiple images taken by the orbiting Chandra X-Ray Observatory on top of each other, essentially multiplying the weak X-ray signals created by the black holes as they devoured nearby gas and dust.
They detected only the most high-energy X-rays, Schawinski said, meaning the black holes must be hidden behind large quantities of dust and gas from their host galaxies. "This explains why they were so difficult to find," he said.
Theorists, including Yale cosmologist Priyamvada Natarajan, used the observations to determine that even these earliest black holes appear to grow and evolve along with their host galaxies, which is similar to what astronomers have observed in the nearby universe.
"These observations indicate that extremely massive black holes already existed as early as 700-800 million years after the Big Bang, which suggests that either they were born massive to start with, or they experienced rapid growth bursts," Natarajan said. "Either scenario tells us much more than we previously knew, which is very exciting."
Next, the team hopes to use the Chandra observatory to look at an even bigger field of view so they can test theories about how these earliest black holes formed.
Source: Yale University
Articles on the same topic
- Black hole kills star and blasts 3.8 billion light year beam at Earth13 years ago
- X-ray telescope finds new voracious black holes in early universe13 years ago
- Rutgers contributes to findings that black holes were surprisingly common in early universe13 years ago
- Nearby galaxy boasts 2 monster black holes, both active13 years ago
Other sources
- Black holes dating to the early universe uncoveredfrom LA Times - Science13 years ago
- Ultra-Bright Burst of Light Marks the Death Throes of a Star Being Eaten Alivefrom PopSci13 years ago
- Galaxy's Heart Beats in X-Raysfrom Space.com13 years ago
- Rare Sight: Giant Black Hole Devours Star, Fires Beams at Earthfrom Live Science13 years ago
- The Hole Picture: Growth of Black Holes and Galaxies Linked from an Early Agefrom Scientific American13 years ago
- ScienceShot: Powerful Jet Being Produced by Star-Eating Black Holefrom Science NOW13 years ago
- Black hole eating star did cause huge blast: reportsfrom CBC: Technology & Science13 years ago
- Massive black hole devours starfrom BBC News: Science & Nature13 years ago
- Black hole shreds star, sparking gamma ray flashfrom Reuters:Science13 years ago
- Gamma-ray flash came from star being eaten by massive black holefrom Science Daily13 years ago
- Black hole kills star and blasts 3.8 billion light year beam at Earthfrom Science Daily13 years ago
- Unusual Celestial Event Was Black Hole Swallowing a Starfrom NY Times Science13 years ago
- Black Hole Caught Eating a Star, Gamma-Ray Flash Hintsfrom National Geographic13 years ago
- Giant black hole eats star, fires beams at Earthfrom CBSNews - Science13 years ago
- Unusual gamma-ray flash may have come from star being eaten by massive black holefrom Physorg13 years ago
- Rare Sight: Giant Black Hole Devours Star, Fires Beams at Earthfrom Space.com13 years ago
- AUDIO: The oldest black holes in the universefrom BBC News: Science & Nature13 years ago
- Black hole growth, galaxy formation linkedfrom UPI13 years ago
- Black hole growth, galaxy formation linkedfrom UPI13 years ago
- X-ray telescope finds new voracious black holes in early universefrom Science Daily13 years ago
- Giant Black Holes Found at Dawn of the Universefrom National Geographic13 years ago
- Astronomers discover earliest black holes at dawn of universefrom Science Daily13 years ago
- X-ray analysis technique helps scientists determine that black holes grew voraciously in young galaxiesfrom Science Daily13 years ago
- NASA's Chandra finds massive black holes common in early universefrom Science Daily13 years ago
- Black holes found to exist since dawn of timefrom CBSNews - Science13 years ago
- Secrets of Earliest Black Holes Found in Ancient Galaxiesfrom Space.com13 years ago
- Most distant black holes ever found reveal secretsfrom CBC: Technology & Science13 years ago
- Bblack holes were surprisingly common in early universe: studyfrom Physorg13 years ago
- Twin Supermassive Black Holes Found At Nearby Galaxy's Heartfrom PopSci13 years ago
- How Do Black Holes Form?from Space.com13 years ago
- Which Stars Form Black Holes?from Space.com13 years ago
- Nearby galaxy boasts two monster black holes, both activefrom Science Daily13 years ago
- Monster Black Hole Twins Found Inside Galaxy's Bellyfrom Space.com13 years ago
- Our Galactic Neighbor Harbors a Second Black Holefrom Space.com13 years ago
- Nearby galaxy boasts two monster black holes, both activefrom Physorg13 years ago