Astronomers figured out how supermassive Black holes

Absolute Unit

At the center of our Milky Way galaxy is a supermassive hole, several million times more massive than our Sun.

Until recently, scientists weren’t sure how these gargantuan black reached those ridiculous proportions. By and large, astronomers assumed they did so by feeding on their usual cosmic diets of wayward stars and other space stuff that drifted too close.

But it turns out that some of these supermassive black holes have experienced sudden growth spurts during which they rapidly gulp down vast quantities of gases from the surrounding area, according to new research published Monday in Nature Astronomy. Such growth spurts have never been observed before, and this new finding could scientists a better understanding of how galaxies like ours came to be.

Star Light, Star Bright

The new research is based on data collected by Tel Aviv University scientists working on the All Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae back in February 2017. That’s when the scientists observed what appeared to be a massive explosion around a distant black hole.

Originally, they thought that the bright radiation was the result of a tidal disruption event, which is when a star drifts too close to a hungry black hole and gets consumed. But this event was 50 times brighter than a typical tidal disruption event.

“We followed this event for more than a year with telescopes on Earth and in space, and what we saw did not match anything we had seen before,” said Lair Arcavi, an astronomer who contributed to the research.

Gas Bubble

The research shows that this couldn’t have been a normal tidal disruption event, because it lasted 14 months — much longer than it takes a supermassive black hole to eat a star. Rather, it shows that supermassive black holes reach their gargantuan size by engaging in long-term periods of rapid growth during which they suck in gases from their surroundings.

The Tel Aviv scientists aren’t sure why, exactly, these growth spurts happen — but the work paves the way for a new understanding of the supermassive black hole that shaped our galaxy.

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