Supermassive Black Holes Lurking In The Hearts Of Galaxies

MessageToEagle.com – Supermassive black holes are the most destructive force in the Universe, with a compact energy source of enormous strength and a mass of an order of magnitude between 105 and 1010 (hundreds of thousands and tens of billions) of solar masses!

A black hole is a special region of space from which no matter or radiation can escape. A black hole is a result of the extreme curvature of space by a massive compact body. However, black holes can never be observed directly and their existence can only be inferred from the gravitational effects and the radiation emitted  by material falling into them.

The supermassive black holes are so bizarre that until recently scientists did not believe they existed.

 Artist's rendition of an active, mass-accreting black hole in a luminous, gas-rich merging galaxy. Credit: NAOJ
Artist’s rendition of an active, mass-accreting black hole in a luminous, gas-rich merging galaxy. Credit: NAOJ

But they do exist and are believed to be the engines that power nuclear activity in galaxies.

They are dangerous; they could fill a whole solar system! It’s a power of unbelievable proportions that causes space time distortions. Black holes alter spacetime.

A few years ago, NASA scientists using the Swift satellite conducted the first all-sky survey and gathered more than 200 supermassive black holes (Active Galactic Nuclei, or AGN) in the local universe.

“We are confident that we are seeing every active, supermassive black hole within 400 million light years of Earth,” said Jack Tueller of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., who led the effort.

Recently, astronomers of University of California, Berkeley, have discovered the largest black holes to date – two monsters with masses equivalent to 10 billion suns that are threatening to consume anything, even light, within a region five times the size of our solar system.

These black holes are at the centers of two galaxies more than 300 million light years from Earth
To date, approximately 63 supermassive black holes have been found lurking in the cores of nearby galaxies.

See also:

Giant Black Hole Explosion In Space: 100 Times Higher Than The Total Power Output Of The Milky Way Galaxy!

The largest for more than three decades was a 6.3 billion solar mass black hole in the center of the nearby galaxy M87.

They produce energy from matter extremely efficiently.

According to astronomical calculations, matter that falls into a black hole can emit an amount of energy equivalent to converting as much as 30% of its mass into energy!

 Baby Black Hole This is an artist's impression of a growing supermassive black hole located in the early Universe, showing a disk of gas rotating around the central object that generates copious amounts of radiation. This gas is destined to be consumed by the black hole. The black hole's mass is less than one hundredth of the mass it will have when the Universe reaches its present day age of about 13.7 billion years. Credits: Chandra/ NASA
Baby Black Hole. This is an artist’s impression of a growing supermassive black hole located in the early Universe, showing a disk of gas rotating around the central object that generates copious amounts of radiation. This gas is destined to be consumed by the black hole. The black hole’s mass is less than one hundredth of the mass it will have when the Universe reaches its present day age of about 13.7 billion years. Credits: Chandra/ NASA

Just think about it, for comparison, nuclear fusion converts less than 1% of the masses of nuclei into energy.

With the exception of supermassive black holes, nothing seems capable of producing such tremendous amount of energy.

Astronomers think that the cores of virtually every galaxy contain a supermassive black hole of a million solar masses or more. Our Milky Way also has one, Sagittarius A (Sgr A ), the most energetic object in the Milky Way about with about 4.3 million solar masses. Compared to other black holes of similar size, Sgr A was rather dormant – until recently.

 The supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way is known as Sagittarius A* (or Sgr A). The fuel for this black hole comes from powerful winds blown off dozens of massive young stars that are concentrated nearby. These stars are located a relatively large distance away from Sgr A*, where the gravity of the black hole is weak, and so their high-velocity winds are difficult for the black hole to capture and swallow. Scientists have previously calculated that Sgr A* should consume only about 1% of the fuel carried in the winds. Credits: Chandra X-ray Observatory
The supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way is known as Sagittarius A* (or Sgr A).
The fuel for this black hole comes from powerful winds blown off dozens of massive young stars that are concentrated nearby. These stars are located a relatively large distance away from Sgr A*, where the gravity of the black hole is weak, and so their high-velocity winds are difficult for the black hole to capture and swallow. Scientists have previously calculated that Sgr A* should consume only about 1% of the fuel carried in the winds. Credits: Chandra X-ray Observatory

Since 2002, astronomers observed the black hole’s quiet neighborhood through the Very Large Telescope. Now, Sagittarius A wakes up. A dusty gas cloud, three times the mass of Earth, and with a highly eccentric orbit, is falling into the accretion zone of our black hole. It will be closest to the black hole in 2013 with a distance of 40 billion kilometers.

For the next few years the cloud will be consumed by our black hole. Nothing can escape a black hole’s gravity, not even light.

“The event will become much more dramatic in the near future … the cloud now accelerates quickly towards the massive black hole,” Stefan Gillessen, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany said.

“Only two stars so far have come that close to the black hole since we started our observations in 1992,” says Stefan Gillessen.

 Black hole mergers produce copious gravitational waves, sometimes for years, as the black holes approach each other and collide. Researchers crunched Einstein's theory of general relativity on the Columbia supercomputer at the NASA Ames Research Center to create a three-dimensional simulation of merging black holes. This was the largest astrophysical calculation ever performed on a NASA supercomputer. Credit: Henze, NASA
Black hole mergers produce copious gravitational waves, sometimes for years, as the black holes approach each other and collide. Researchers crunched Einstein’s theory of general relativity on the Columbia supercomputer at the NASA Ames Research Center to create a three-dimensional simulation of merging black holes. This was the largest astrophysical calculation ever performed on a NASA supercomputer. Credit: Henze, NASA

“The stars passed unharmed through their closest approach; the crucial difference to them is that the gas cloud will be completely ripped apart by the tidal forces around the black hole.”

The cloud is expected to break up in 2013.

Only a few percent of these black holes appear to be active and violent consumers of all possible matter around them. Naturally, there is no instance in which a black hole actually has been observed in the center of a galaxy.

They emit no radiation, therefore no direct detection of a remote black hole is possible, only its great gravitational influence can be detected.

 Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory in Livingston, Louisiana. Each of the two arms is four-kilometer-long. LIGO was designed and constructed by a team of scientists from Caltech and MIT. In an effort to detect passing gravitational waves, researchers bounce high-power laser beams back and forth in each arm. Passing gravitational waves alter the length between the mirrors in the LIGO arms, which the lasers detect. Credit: LIGO Livingston Observatory
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory in Livingston, Louisiana. Each of the two arms is four-kilometer-long. LIGO was designed and constructed by a team of scientists from Caltech and MIT. In an effort to detect passing gravitational waves, researchers bounce high-power laser beams back and forth in each arm. Passing gravitational waves alter the length between the mirrors in the LIGO arms, which the lasers detect. Credit: LIGO Livingston Observatory

What happens when two supermassive monster black holes move dangerously close to each other and collide?

Nobody has witnessed a collision of black holes yet, but such extremely violent cosmic event should generate gravity waves of sufficient amplitude to detect on earth.

The Columbia Supercomputer at NASA’s Advanced Supercomputing Facility at Ames Research Center has performed a series of simulations of gravitational waves.

Laser interferometric detectors, such as LIGO, GEO600 and Virgo are the most sophisticated black hole hunters detecting gravitational waves!

Their goal is to seeks ripples in the fabric of space and time.

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