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NASA discovers "bonanza" of supermassive black holes, hot DOGs

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XiaNaphryz

LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT
NASA's WISE Survey Uncovers Millions of Black Holes:

August 29, 2012

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission has led to a bonanza of newfound supermassive black holes and extreme galaxies called hot DOGs, or dust-obscured galaxies.

Images from the telescope have revealed millions of dusty black hole candidates across the universe and about 1,000 even dustier objects thought to be among the brightest galaxies ever found. These powerful galaxies, which burn brightly with infrared light, are nicknamed hot DOGs.

"WISE has exposed a menagerie of hidden objects," said Hashima Hasan, WISE program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "We've found an asteroid dancing ahead of Earth in its orbit, the coldest star-like orbs known and now, supermassive black holes and galaxies hiding behind cloaks of dust."


WISE scanned the whole sky twice in infrared light, completing its survey in early 2011. Like night-vision goggles probing the dark, the telescope captured millions of images of the sky. All the data from the mission have been released publicly, allowing astronomers to dig in and make new discoveries.

The latest findings are helping astronomers better understand how galaxies and the behemoth black holes at their centers grow and evolve together. For example, the giant black hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, called Sagittarius A*, has 4 million times the mass of our sun and has gone through periodic feeding frenzies where material falls towards the black hole, heats up and irradiates its surroundings. Bigger central black holes, up to a billion times the mass of our sun, may even shut down star formation in galaxies.

In one study, astronomers used WISE to identify about 2.5 million actively feeding supermassive black holes across the full sky, stretching back to distances more than 10 billion light-years away. About two-thirds of these objects never had been detected before because dust blocks their visible light. WISE easily sees these monsters because their powerful, accreting black holes warm the dust, causing it to glow in infrared light.

"We've got the black holes cornered," said Daniel Stern of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., lead author of the WISE black hole study and project scientist for another NASA black-hole mission, the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR). "WISE is finding them across the full sky, while NuSTAR is giving us an entirely new look at their high-energy X-ray light and learning what makes them tick."

In two other WISE papers, researchers report finding what are among the brightest galaxies known, one of the main goals of the mission. So far, they have identified about 1,000 candidates.

These extreme objects can pour out more than 100 trillion times as much light as our sun. They are so dusty, however, that they appear only in the longest wavelengths of infrared light captured by WISE. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope followed up on the discoveries in more detail and helped show that, in addition to hosting supermassive black holes feverishly snacking on gas and dust, these DOGs are busy churning out new stars.

"These dusty, cataclysmically forming galaxies are so rare WISE had to scan the entire sky to find them," said Peter Eisenhardt, lead author of the paper on the first of these bright, dusty galaxies, and project scientist for WISE at JPL. "We are also seeing evidence that these record setters may have formed their black holes before the bulk of their stars. The 'eggs' may have come before the 'chickens.'"


More than 100 of these objects, located about 10 billion light-years away, have been confirmed using the W.M. Keck Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, as well as the Gemini Observatory in Chile, Palomar's 200-inch Hale telescope near San Diego, and the Multiple Mirror Telescope Observatory near Tucson, Ariz.

The WISE observations, combined with data at even longer infrared wavelengths from Caltech's Submillimeter Observatory atop Mauna Kea, revealed that these extreme galaxies are more than twice as hot as other infrared-bright galaxies. One theory is their dust is being heated by an extremely powerful burst of activity from the supermassive black hole.

"We may be seeing a new, rare phase in the evolution of galaxies," said Jingwen Wu of JPL, lead author of the study on the submillimeter observations. All three papers are being published in the Astrophysical Journal.


The three technical journal articles, including PDFs, can be found at http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.0811, http://arxiv.org/abs/1208.5517 and http://arxiv.org/abs/1208.5518 .

JPL manages and operates WISE for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington. The principal investigator, Edward Wright, is at UCLA. The mission was competitively selected under NASA's Explorers Program managed by the Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. The science instrument was built by the Space Dynamics Laboratory, Logan, Utah, and the spacecraft was built by Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo. Science operations and data processing and archiving take place at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.

BCEFZ.jpg


A Sky Chock-Full of Black Holes

With its all-sky infrared survey, NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, has identified millions of quasar candidates. Quasars are supermassive black holes with masses millions to billions times greater than our sun. The black holes "feed" off surrounding gas and dust, pulling the material onto them. As the material falls in on the black hole, it becomes extremely hot and extremely bright. This image zooms in on one small region of the WISE sky, covering an area about three times larger than the moon. The WISE quasar candidates are highlighted with yellow circles.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA

r1cBB.jpg


Exposing Black Holes Disguised in Dust

This zoomed-in view of a portion of the all-sky survey from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer shows a collection of quasar candidates. Quasars are supermassive black holes feeding off gas and dust. The larger yellow circles show WISE quasar candidates; the smaller blue-green circles show quasars found in the previous visible-light Sloan Digital Sky Survey. WISE finds three times as many quasar candidates with a comparable brightness. Thanks to WISE's infrared vision, it picks up previously known bright quasars as well as large numbers of hidden, dusty quasars.

The circular inset images, obtained with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, show how the new WISE quasars differ from the quasars identified in visible light. Quasars selected in visible light look like stars, as shown in the lower right inset; the cross is a diffraction pattern caused by the bright point source of light. Quasars found by WISE often have more complex appearances, as seen in the Hubble inset near the center. This is because the quasars found by WISE are often obscured or hidden by dust, which blocks their visible light and allows the fainter host galaxy surrounding the black hole to be seen.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/STScI

rodtK.jpg


Analyzing Hot DOG Galaxies

This plot illustrates the new population of "hot DOGs," or hot dust-obscured objects, found by WISE. The purple band represents the range of brightness observed for the extremely dusty objects. These powerful galaxies, which host active supermassive black holes at their cores, pour out enormous amounts of light at infrared wavelengths, while their visible light is blocked by dust.

Visible light we see with our eyes has shorter wavelengths than one micron, while the longest wavelengths shown here come from observations with the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. The red line shows the brightness profile, or spectral energy distribution, of a proto-typical infrared luminous galaxy.

The small images near the top show more familiar objects at a range of temperatures from 70 Kelvin, or minus 330 degrees Fahrenheit, for liquid nitrogen, to 1,500 Kelvin, or 2,240 degrees Fahrenheit, for lava. The energy from hotter objects peaks at shorter wavelengths.

The extreme WISE objects represented by the purple band are much brighter -- and peak at much shorter, or hotter, wavelengths -- than the typical infrared luminous galaxy, hence their nickname: hot dust-obscured galaxies, or Hot DOGs.

Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA

co4Zf.jpg


Homing in on 'Hot Dogs'

This image is a portion of the all-sky survey from NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE. It highlights the first of about 1,000 "hot DOGs" found by the mission (magenta circle). Hot DOGs are hot dust-obscured galaxies and are among the most powerful galaxies known. Yellow circles are active supermassive black holes found by WISE, which are much more common.

The panels at right show the "Hot DOG" as seen in the four individual infrared bands obtained by WISE. These images are at wavelengths from 5 to 30 times redder than what our eyes can see, with the shortest wavelengths at top, and longest at bottom.

Dust affects shorter wavelengths more than longer wavelengths. These objects are so dusty that not only their visible light but also their shorter-wavelength infrared light is blocked, as evident by their apparent absence in the top two panels. Less than one in 100,000 WISE sources are similarly prominent only in the two longer-wavelength WISE infrared bands.
 

i-Lo

Member
There's a leak in our universe!

Sorry, I am now going to read this whole article in detail and research it some more for an academic and contemplative post.
 

RSP

Member
It boggles my mind how they get as much information as they do out of images like this

That's not really how it works. Data is analyzed, conclusions are drawn and then an image is used as an indicator of what the results actually look like. There was a lot of more number crunching, and a lot less looking at the actual image than the image itself implies.

Nevertheless, it is still amazing what we are able to do nowadays.
 

The Technomancer

card-carrying scientician
That's not really how it works. Data is analyzed, conclusions are drawn and then an image is used as an indicator of what the results actually look like. There was a lot of more number crunching, and a lot less looking at the actual image than the image itself implies.

Nevertheless, it is still amazing what we are able to do nowadays.

Is the data being drawn from a source with a higher resolution than that image though?
 
Having.. troub..le... wrapping... my... mi.nd... ar...ound....that....


/dead

What if, man...what if we're like falling in and out of black holes all the time. And, like, the big bang was just all the shit from the previous universe exploding out the other side like explosive diarrhea.
 
That's not really how it works. Data is analyzed, conclusions are drawn and then an image is used as an indicator of what the results actually look like. There was a lot of more number crunching, and a lot less looking at the actual image than the image itself implies.

Nevertheless, it is still amazing what we are able to do nowadays.

It's still light. We get all this info based off of the light emitted from the object. It's pretty amazing what we can gather based off of this little information given.
 

RSP

Member
Is the data being drawn from a source with a higher resolution than that image though?

Well, what you're seeing in the image is the highest resolution available, but it's compiled from from a combination of x-ray, gamma-ray, infrared and a tiny portion of actual visible spectrum.

The reason they're using these images is to make it relevant to basically everybody but the science community.

All that aside, the first black holes have been comfirmed by detecting gravitational lensing (so, black holes moving in front of clusters of stars to see the light bend around the strong pull of the black hole). Once that had been confirmed (read: 10 years later). methods were developed to detect these lensing effects from huge streams of data. Of course, there is a human factor involved for verifying all the data, but I guess all I wanted to say is that it's more than a group of people huddled around a picture to find the black holes.

Then again, it's getting late. Probably shouldn't have gotten too worked up about it :)
 

XiaNaphryz

LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT
Having.. troub..le... wrapping... my... mi.nd... ar...ound....that....


/dead

If you're not dead enough times already, don't forget that despite being so massively larger mass-wise, these black holes could potentially still be small in terms of physical space! For a supermassive black hole, the smaller ones could barely be bigger than the earth's diameter for example!
 

Aiii

So not worth it
It's still light. We get all this info based off of the light emitted from the object. It's pretty amazing what we can gather based off of this little information given.

Still, loads of assumptions are made. We cold be 99% wrong on pretty much all of this. Exciting stuff.
 

gwarm01

Member
Science GAF - does this change how we think about dark matter now? As far as I know, dark matter as a concept explains that the reason our universe doesn't contain as much matter as is predicted by our physics models is because the majority of it is dark or undetectable. It always reminded me of the luminous ether, more a hand waving explanation of something we don't understand rather than a real answer.

Is it possible that there is far, far more out there than we previously thought? Perhaps all of that missing matter is there, we just can't see it in the visible wavelength because it is literally dark.
 
Biggest F***ing waste of money on this planet. Cancel NASA in its entirety.

i.. Can't wrap my head around the findings here. Just WHOA!
 

XiaNaphryz

LATIN, MATRIPEDICABUS, DO YOU SPEAK IT

akira28

Member
OK. So the universe is larger, far more populated, and more dangerous than we ever imagined before. When do we take off?
 
It's always crazy to think about the distances these objects and events are away from us. These blackholes that are 100 billion light years away probably don't even exist anymore. Hell, everything we are looking at right now might no longer be there anymore. The universe could be collapsing from the outside in into a void, and as long as its moving slower than light, we'd have no idea.
 
Could still be something similar to that, but the other way around. Here's a nice article about how it could be possible that each black hole contains its own unique universe.

Universes in universes in universes.

Damn, that's kind of scary. Fucking black holes, stealing material from our universe and depositing it somewhere else!!

This also fits in with the theory of, "cold death" of the universe.

Black Hole Era
1040 years to 10100 years
After 1040 years, black holes will dominate the universe. They will slowly evaporate via Hawking radiation.[3], §IVG. A black hole with a mass of around 1 solar mass will vanish in around 2×1066 years. However, many of these are likely to merge with supermassive black holes at the center of their galaxies through processes described above long before this happens. As the lifetime of a black hole is proportional to the cube of its mass, more massive black holes take longer to decay. A supermassive black hole with a mass of 1011 (100 billion) solar masses will evaporate in around 2×1099 years.[26]

Hawking radiation has a thermal spectrum. During most of a black hole's lifetime, the radiation has a low temperature and is mainly in the form of massless particles such as photons and hypothetical gravitons. As the black hole's mass decreases, its temperature increases, becoming comparable to the Sun's by the time the black hole mass has decreased to 1019 kilograms. The hole then provides a temporary source of light during the general darkness of the Black Hole Era. During the last stages of its evaporation, a black hole will emit not only massless particles but also heavier particles such as electrons, positrons, protons and antiprotons.[11], pp. 148–150.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Future_of_an_expanding_universe
 
Incredible. And yet with all that dangerous stuff out there, our little planet is still intact because of the sheer vastness of space.
 
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