New research explains how galaxy centres light up
July 9th, 2010 - 5:32 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 9 (ANI): Scientists have found that galactic nuclei (AGN), the extremely bright centres of some galaxies, which have sustained recent cloud impacts have enough fuel to light up by giving birth to hundreds of stars and feeding the black hole at their centre.
Galaxies like our own were built billions of years ago from a deluge of giant clouds of gas, some of which continue to rain down.
Now new calculations tie the rain of giant clouds of gas to AGN.
If a gas cloud with millions of times more mass than our Sun wanders too close to the centre of a galaxy, it can either be consumed by the supermassive black hole that lurks there or, through shocks and collapse, give birth to new stars.
“For a while, people have known that gas clouds are falling onto galaxies, and they’ve also known that active galactic nuclei are powered by gas falling onto supermassive black holes. But no one put the two ideas together until now and said, ‘Hey, maybe one is causing the other!’”said Barry McKernan, a research associate in the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History and an assistant professor at the Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC), City University of New York.
All galaxies are believed to host a supermassive black hole at their centre, yet only a fraction of galactic centres show signs of brighter activity due to black hole feeding.
The new research provides an explanation for the apparent conundrum: galactic centres which have sustained recent cloud impacts have enough fuel to light up by giving birth to hundreds of stars and feeding the central black hole.
Galactic centres that have not been hit for a while (in cosmic terms, for more than about 10 million years) will be relatively inactive and their cores will appear normal.
“It’s interesting that only some galaxies are active, even though we think every galaxy contains a supermassive black hole. The cloud bombardment idea provides an explanation: it’s just random luck,” said K. E. Saavik Ford, a research associate at the Museum and an assistant professor at BMCC. (ANI)
- Cosmic collisions 'aren't responsible for black hole growth' - Jan 06, 2011
- Astronomers discover 33 pairs of waltzing black holes - Jan 05, 2010
- What makes black holes at galaxy centre become active - Jun 16, 2010
- Supermassive black holes get displaced from galaxy centres - May 26, 2010
- Astronomers find supermassive black holes - Sep 01, 2011
- 'Smoking gun' of black hole activation found - May 27, 2010
- Cold streams of gas pushed huge growth in black holes - Dec 14, 2011
- Supermassive black hole discovered in dwarf galaxy - Jan 10, 2011
- Black holes gobble up stars to grow bigger - Apr 03, 2012
- NASA scientists' breakthrough in determining hyperactivity of black holes - Dec 21, 2010
- Astronomers take deep look into material around black holes - Dec 09, 2009
- Scientists discover active black hole in the 'Eye of Sauron' - Mar 11, 2011
- Discovery pinpoints location of missing matter in universe - May 12, 2010
- 'Missing matter' in nearby Universe located? - May 12, 2010
- Awesome power of supermassive black holes revealed - Apr 17, 2010
Tags: active galactic nuclei, american museum of natural history, bmcc, bombardment, borough of manhattan, borough of manhattan community, borough of manhattan community college, cosmic terms, expl, galaxies, gas cloud, gas clouds, giant clouds, giving birth, manhattan community college, mckernan, museum of natural history, new stars, supermassive black hole, supermassive black holes