Cosmos

Astronomer­s f ind “Goldilocks” black hole is just right

Early black holes may seed their more massive cousins.

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Last year, scientists used gravitatio­nal waves to detect an elusive intermedia­temass black hole for the first time. Now, Australian astronomer­s have spotted another – this time using gamma-ray bursts.

Black holes are formed when massive stars reach the end of their lives and collapse under their own gravity. But they aren’t all the same – stellar mass black holes are small, just a few times the mass of our Sun, while supermassi­ve black holes at the hearts of galaxies are enormous, with masses millions or even billions of times greater than our Sun.

Intermedia­te mass black holes are the missing link between these two population­s, thought to span between 100 and 100,000 solar masses. The black hole discovered in 2020 was 142 solar masses.

This newly discovered monster comes in at approximat­ely

55,000 solar masses. The study, published in Nature Astronomy, describes detecting the black hole via a gravitatio­nally lensed gamma-ray burst – a flash of high-energy light emitted when two distant stars collided.

“This newly discovered black hole could be an ancient relic – a primordial black hole – created in the early universe before the first stars and galaxies formed,” explains study co-author, Eric Thrane from Monash University.

“These early black holes may be the seeds of the supermassi­ve black holes that live in the hearts of galaxies today.”

The study estimates that there are around 46,000 black holes of this mass in our neighbourh­ood of the Milky Way alone.

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