PHILADELPHIA -- Incredibly
massive black holes had fully matured just a billion years after the birth of
the universe, according to two separate studies.
Scientists
already had strong evidence that black holes grew to gargantuan heft early in
the universe. Several have been found to pack the mass of hundreds of millions
of suns or more. But now scientists are pushing the limit
of how far back in time they spot such objects and improving the firmness of
their measurements.
In a study
announced Nov. 22, a black hole catalogued as SDSSp
J1306 appears to be about one billion times as massive as the sun. It is 12.7 billion light-years away, meaning the
light just recorded -- by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory -- took 12.7 billion years
to reach the vicinity of Earth.
The
universe is thought to be 13.7 billion years old.
A similarly
massive and distant black hole was studied recently with the European Space
Agency's XMM-Newton X-ray satellite. The object, SDSSp
J1030, is 12.8 billion light-years away.
"These two
results seem to indicate that the way supermassive
black holes produce X-rays has remained essentially the same from a very early
date in the universe," said Daniel Schwartz of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. Schwartz was
involved in the Chandra study. "This implies that the central black hole engine
in a massive galaxy was formed very soon after the Big Bang."
The Big
Bang is the leading theory for the origination of the universe as we know it.
Black holes
can't be seen, because light and everything else that gets too close to them
falls in and becomes trapped. But as gas approaches a black hole, it is
superheated, making it glow in X-rays.
To find and
measure black holes, astronomers examine these X-rays, along with the
gravitational influence of a presumed black hole on the galaxy in which it
resides. The results of both studies were reported in recent issues of the Astrophysical
Journal.
The black
hole in the Chandra study is producing energy at the rate of twenty-trillion suns.
How such
massive and energetic structures formed so quickly remains a major puzzle
for scientists. Mergers of smaller galaxies and their black holes may have
played a role. Researchers suspect that black hole formation and galaxy
development go largely hand-in-hand, but they cannot say which comes first.