Discovery of Growth-Spurt Era for Black Holes and Galaxies
6 April 2005—Astronomers from Penn
State are
on the international research team that will announce its discovery
of rapidly growing black holes in distant, massive, star-forming
galaxies. The research will be published in the 7 April 2005 issue
of the journal Nature.
The Penn State scientists include Niel Brandt,
professor of astronomy and astrophysics, and two former postdoctoral
fellows in his
lab: David Alexander, who now is a Royal
Society Research Fellow
at the University of Cambridge in
the United Kingdom, and Franz
Bauer, who now is a Chandra Fellow at Columbia
University.
The research team used three observatories to view the universe
in three different wavelengths: the Chandra
X-ray Observatory in Earth orbit for X-rays, the Keck
telescope in Hawaii for optical
wavelengths, and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in Hawaii
for submillimeter wavelengths. A major contribution of Brandt's
lab is its work with the Chandra X-ray Observatory on the deep
sky survey known as the Chandra Deep Field North. "This
research has been a major effort in our lab for the past five
years, and it will continue to deliver exciting scientific results
for the next decade," Brandt says.
More information about the discovery is contained in the following
NASA press release.
[ B K K ]
CONTACTS AT PENN STATE:
Niel Brandt: 814-865-3509, niel@astro.psu.edu
Barbara Kennedy (PIO): science@psu.edu, (+1) 814-863-4682
NASA's
PRESS RELEASE
EMBARGOED until 1:00 p.m., Eastern U.S. time, on 6 April 2005
Era
of Galaxy and Black
Hole Growth Spurt Discovered
Dolores Beasley, NASA Headquarters, Washington, Dc. (Phone:
202/358-1753)
Steve Roy, Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. (Phone:
256/544-6535)
Megan Watzke, Chandra X-ray Center, Cambridge, Mass. (Phone:
617/496-7998)
Distant galaxies undergoing intense bursts of star formation
have been shown by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory to be fertile
growing grounds for the largest black holes in the Universe.
Collisions between galaxies in the early Universe may be the
ultimate cause for both the accelerated star formation and black
hole growth.
By combining the deepest X-ray image ever obtained with submillimeter
and optical observations, an international team of scientists
has found evidence that some extremely luminous adolescent galaxies
and their central black holes underwent a phenomenal spurt of
growth more than 10 billion years ago. This concurrent black
hole and galaxy growth spurt is only seen in these galaxies and
may have set the stage for the birth of quasars -- distant galaxies
that contain the largest and most active black holes in the Universe.
"The extreme distances of these galaxies allow us to look
back in time, and take a snapshot of how today's largest galaxies
looked when they were producing most of their stars and growing
black holes, " said David Alexander of the University of
Cambridge, UK, and lead author of a paper in the April 7, 2005
issue of Nature that describes this work.
The galaxies studied by Alexander and his colleagues are known
as submillimeter galaxies, so-called because they were originally
identified by the James Clerk Maxwell submillimeter telescope
(JCMT) on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. The submillimeter observations
along with optical data from Keck indicate these galaxies had
an unusually large amount of gas. The gas in each galaxy was
forming into stars at a rate of about one per day, or 100 times
the present rate in the Milky Way galaxy. The Chandra X-ray data
show that the supermassive black holes in the galaxies were also
growing at the same time.
These galaxies are very faint and it is only with the deepest
observations of the Universe that they can be detected at all. "The
deeper we look into the Universe with Chandra, the more fascinating
things we find" says Niel Brandt of Penn State University
in University Park. "Who knows what nature has in store
for us as we push the boundaries yet further."
The X-ray observations also showed that the black holes are
surrounded by a dense shroud of gas and dust. This is probably
the material that will be consumed by the growing black holes.
Hubble Space Telescope observations indicate that most of the
submillimeter galaxies are actually two galaxies that are colliding
and merging. Recent sophisticated computer simulations performed
by Tiziana Di Matteo of Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh,
Penn., and her collaborators have shown that such mergers drive
gas toward the central regions of galaxies, triggering a burst
of star formation and providing fuel for the growth of a central
black hole.
"It is exciting that these recent observations are in good
agreement with our simulation," says Di Matteo, "We
seem to be converging on a consistent picture of galaxy formation
with both observations and theory." In particular, this
work will help scientists to understand the observed link in
the present epoch between the total mass of stars in the central
bulges of large galaxies and the size of their central, supermassive
black holes.
The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) is operated on behalf
of the United Kingdom, Canada & Netherlands by the Joint
Astronomy Centre. With its 15-meter (50-foot) diameter dish the
JCMT detects light with "submillimeter" wavelengths,
between infrared light and radio waves on the wavelength scale.
The W. M. Keck Observatory is operated by the California Association
for Research in Astronomy.
NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., manages
the Chandra program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington.
Northrop Grumman of Redondo Beach, Calif., was the prime development
contractor for the observatory. The Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory controls science and flight operations from the Chandra
X-ray Center in Cambridge, Mass.
Additional information and images are available at:
http://chandra.harvard.edu
and
http://chandra.nasa.gov
[ M. W. at CXC]
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