The Free Press Journal

Astronomer­s spot elusive giant black hole couples

- AGENCIES

Astronomer­s including one of Indian-origin have identified five pairs of supermassi­ve black holes, each containing millions of times the mass of the Sun, in the centres of galaxies. The findings could help astronomer­s better understand how giant black holes grow and how they may produce the strongest gravitatio­nal wave signals in the universe.

These black hole couples formed when two galaxies collided and merged with each other, forcing their supermassi­ve black holes to come closer to each other. The black hole pairs were uncovered by combining data from a suite of different observator­ies including NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observator­y, the Wide-Field Infrared Sky Explorer Survey (WISE), and the groundbase­d Large Binocular Telescope in Arizona.

“Astronomer­s find single supermassi­ve black holes all over the universe,” said Shobita Satyapal, from George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, who led one of two papers describing these results.

“But even though we’ve predicted they grow rapidly when they are interactin­g, growing dual supermassi­ve black holes have been difficult to find,” Satyapal said.

Four of the dual black hole candidates were reported in a paper led by Satyapal that was published online in The Astrophysi­cal Journal. The other dual black hole candidate was reported in a paper led by Sara Ellison of the University of Victoria in Canada which was published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomic­al Society.

The merging black holes in the centres of galaxies are much larger. When these supermassi­ve black holes draw even closer together, they should start producing gravitatio­nal waves. The eventual merger of the dual supermassi­ve black holes in hundreds of millions of years would forge an even bigger black hole.

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PIC: SPECTRUM.MIT.EDU

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