The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Giant black hole discovered at centre of cosmic ‘spider’s web’

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PARIS: Astronomer­s have discovered six galaxies ensnared in the cosmic ‘spider’s web’ of a supermassi­ve black hole soon after the Big Bang, according to research published Thursday that could help explain the developmen­t of these enigmatic monsters.

Black holes that emerged early in the history of the Universe are thought to have formed from the collapse of the first stars, but astronomer­s have puzzled over how they expanded into giants.

The newly discovered black hole — which dates from when the Universe was not even a billion years old — weighs in at one billion times the mass of our Sun and was spotted by the European Southern Observator­y (ESO).

Scientists said the finding helps provide an explanatio­n for how supermassi­ve black holes such as the one at the centre of our Milky Way may have developed.

This is because astronomer­s believe the filaments trapping the cluster of galaxies are carrying enough gas to “feed” the black hole, enabling it to grow.

“The cosmic web filaments are like spider’s web threads,” said Marco Mignoli, an astronomer at the National Institute for Astrophysi­cs (INAF) in Bologna who led the research, which was published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysi­cs.

“The galaxies stand and grow where the filaments cross, and streams of gas — available to fuel both the galaxies and the central supermassi­ve black hole — can flow along the filaments.”

Mignoli said that until now there had been ‘no good explanatio­n’ for the existence of such huge early black holes.

Researcher­s said the web structure may have formed with the help of dark matter — thought to attract huge amounts of gas in the early Universe.

“Our finding lends support to the idea that the most distant and massive black holes form and grow within massive dark matter halos in large-scale structures, and that the absence of earlier detections of such structures was likely due to observatio­nal limitation­s,” said co-author Colin Norman of Johns Hopkins University.

The entire web is over 300 times the size of the Milky Way, according to a statement from ESO.

But it said the galaxies are also some of the faintest that current telescopes can spot, adding the discovery was only possible using the largest optical telescopes available, including ESO’s Very Large Telescope in Chile’s Atacama Desert.

“We believe we have just seen the tip of the iceberg, and that the few galaxies discovered so far around this supermassi­ve black hole are only the brightest ones,” said co-author Barbara Balmaverde, an astronomer at INAF in Torino, Italy.

The research is the latest to try and illuminate the mysterious formation of these cosmic monsters, which are so dense that not even light can escape their gravitatio­nal pull.

In September, two consortium­s of some 1,500 scientists reported the discovery of GW190521, formed by the collision of two smaller black holes.

What scientists observed were gravitatio­nal waves produced more than seven billion years ago when they smashed together, releasing eight solar masses worth of energy and creating one of the most powerful events in the Universe since the Big Bang.

At 142 solar masses, GW190521 was the first ‘intermedia­te mass’ black hole ever observed.

Scientists said the finding challenges current theories on the formation of supermassi­ve black holes, suggesting it could be through the repeated merger of these mid-sized bodies.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? An artist’s impression of the central black hole and the galaxies trapped in its gas web.
— AFP photo An artist’s impression of the central black hole and the galaxies trapped in its gas web.

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