The Borneo Post

Colossal distant black hole holds surprises about early universe

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WASHINGTON: The oldest and most distant black hole ever observed – a celestial brute 800 million times more massive than the sun – is providing scientists some surprises about the nature of the universe when, on a cosmic scale, it was a mere toddler.

Astronomer­s said the black hole, residing at the centre of a highly luminous celestial object called a quasar, is located about 13.1 billion light years away from Earth.

The quasar’s light detected by the researcher­s dates back to about 690 million years after the Big Bang that created the universe, when the cosmos was only 5 per cent of its present age.

“So if the universe was a 50-yearold person, we’re seeing a picture of that person when he or she was 2-1/2 years old,” said astronomer Eduardo Ba ados of the Carnegie Institutio­n for Science, who led the research published in the journal Nature.

“When we’re looking at further distances, we’re also looking back in time” because of the time it takes for light to travel across the universe, Ba ados added.

That means this object dates back 13.1 billion years.

By way of comparison, Earth is about 4.5 billion years old.

The newly detected quasar, designated as J1342+ 0928, existed during a fundamenta­l shift in the nature of the early universe when it was moving from its ‘dark ages,’ with no light emitted, into a time of luminosity, as gravity condensed matter into the very first stars.

“This object provides us with a measuremen­t of the time at which the universe first became illuminate­d with starlight,” said another of the researcher­s, physics professor Robert Simcoe of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s Kavli Institute for Astrophysi­cs and Space Research.

Finding such a large black hole existing so early in the universe’s history surprised the researcher­s. Its very existence at that point in time challenges current notions about the formation and growth of such objects, they said.

Quasars, energized by gases spiraling at high speeds into an enormous black hole, are known to inhabit the centre of certain galaxies, sometimes outshining all the stars in those galaxies. — Reuters

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