Our Milky
Way galaxy contains a supermassive black hole at its core, as do most if not
all other large galaxies in the modern universe. These gravity wells can have
masses of millions to billions times that of the sun.
Now,
astronomers have more support for the idea that such
black holes are common among the earliest galaxies going back to nearly the
beginning of time. A new study suggests galactic black holes were around even
12 billion years ago when the universe was only 1.7 billion years old and galaxies were just
beginning to form, the astronomers said.
The new
conclusion comes from the discovery of two distant and interacting
galaxies, both of which contain black holes at their hearts that will most
likely merge. The pair is 12 billion light-years away, which means the light
seen by astronomers left the scene 12 billion years ago. (A light-year is the
distance
light will travel in a year, or about 6 trillion miles, or 10 trillion km.)
"Remarkably,
both galaxies contain supermassive black holes at their centers, each capable
of powering a billion, billion, billion light bulbs," said lead researcher
Rob Ivison of the United Kingdom Astronomy Technology Center. "The
implications are wide-reaching: You can't help wondering how many other colossal
black holes may be lurking unseen in the distant universe."
Astronomers
had first noticed one of the galaxies, called 4C60.07, due to its bright radio
emission, which is a telltale sign of a quasar, or a rapidly spinning black
hole that is feeding on its home galaxy. And until now, they thought hydrogen
gas surrounding the central black hole was undergoing a burst of star
formation, churning out stellar babies at a rate of about 5,000 suns every
year.
More
recently, they used the Submillimeter Array of eight radio antennas located in Hawaii, finding 4C60.07 was not forming stars after all. In fact, its stars appeared to be
relatively old and quiescent.
Instead, a
burst of star formation is taking place in the previously unseen companion
galaxy, which is rich in gas and deeply enshrouded in dust. The new radio
emission data also showed a stream of gas being pulled from this newly
discovered galaxy by its neighbor, 4C60.07.
"These
two galaxies are fraternal twins," said researcher Steve Willner of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts. "Both are about the size of
the Milky Way, but each one is unique."
The
research also involved looking at data on the galaxies collected by the Spitzer
Space Telescope.
"The
expectation is that the galaxies would merge and then the black holes would
merge," Willner told SPACE.com. "And I don't want to be
anywhere nearby when that happens. It'll be very spectacular."
He added,
"By now, if we could see them now probably we would have a very big, but
old galaxy with one giant black hole in the center that's the merger of the
two."