BBC Science Focus

BLACK HOLE MERGERS SPOTTED FOR THE FIRST TIME

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The picture below shows the moment two become one: astronomer­s have caught the first images of black holes combining to form the cores of new galaxies.

A team led by Eureka Scientific’s &T /KEJCGN -QUU WUGF VJG 9/|-GEM Observator­y in Hawaii, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) aboard NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observator­y, to find and photograph several pairs of merging black holes.

Coalescing galaxies have been spotted before, but only in their early stages. The final stage of the process, in which their respective black holes merge, has never been imaged before because it occurs behind the enormous, dense cloud of gas and dust that is produced as each of them consumes the surroundin­g material.

The team was able to overcome this obstacle with the help of X-ray data gathered by the BAT. “Gas falling onto the black holes emits X-rays [that penetrate the surroundin­g cloud] and the brightness of the X-rays tells you how quickly the black hole is growing,” Koss explained.

The BAT data pointed to the locations of possible black hole mergers and was cross-referenced against an archive of Hubble images of coalescing galaxies. Koss’s team then turned to the infrared telescopes at the WM Keck Observator­y that could peer through the dust cloud to spot the black holes coming together.

It’s long been hypothesis­ed that coalescing galaxies play a key role in the formation of supermassi­ve black holes, which lie at the core of galaxies like our own Milky Way. But, until now, there has been no observatio­nal evidence to support the idea.

“Computer simulation­s of galaxy smash-ups show us that black holes grow fastest during the final stages of mergers, near the time when the black holes interact, and that’s what we have found in our survey,” said study team member Laura Blecha of the University of Florida, in Gainesvill­e. “The fact that black holes grow faster as mergers progress tells us galaxy encounters are really important for our understand­ing of how these objects got to be so monstrousl­y big.”

The images presage what could happen in a few billion years, when our Milky Way merges with the Andromeda Galaxy. Both galaxies host supermassi­ve black holes at their cores, which will eventually smash together into one larger black hole.

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