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Astronomers Discover 83 Supermassive Black Holes at the Edge of the Universe (cnet.com) 86

"A team of international astronomers have been hunting for ancient, supermassive black holes -- and they've hit the motherlode, discovering 83 previously unknown quasars," reports CNET: The Japanese team turned the ultra-powerful "Hyper Suprime-Cam", mounted to the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii, toward the cosmos' darkest corners, surveying the sky over a period of five years. By studying the snapshots, they've been able to pick potential quasar candidates out of the dark. Notably, their method of probing populations of supermassive black holes that are similar in size to the ones we see in today's universe, has given us a window into their origins.

After identifying 83 potential candidates, the team used a suite of international telescopes to confirm their findings. The quasars they've plucked out are from the very early universe, about 13 billion light years away. Practically, that means the researchers are looking into the past, at objects form less than a billion years after the Big Bang. "It is remarkable that such massive dense objects were able to form so soon after the Big Bang," said Michael Strauss, who co-authored the paper, in a press release. Scientists aren't sure how black holes formed in the early universe, so being able to detect them this far back in time provides new avenues of exploration.

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Astronomers Discover 83 Supermassive Black Holes at the Edge of the Universe

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  • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @07:46AM (#58291490)
    I think they mean, edge of the observable universe.
    • Darn! I you got here first.

      I always get a kick out of astronomers (or perhaps it's the way the MSM reports it) referencing the edge of the universe, as if they know where the boundaries are.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I just can't wrap my head around the idea of a photon lingering about and imparting its energy back on Earth TODAY.

        Photons don't have to linger - they travel at c and thus don't experience time like we do.

        From the photon's reference frame its creation and destruction are instantaneous events. It's just hard to see that in 'Flatland'. Imagine mapping the two photon interactions into a single event from its perspective - like flipping entangled particles just being the projection of a single 5D object into

      • Universe expanding (Score:5, Informative)

        by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @09:50AM (#58291924)

        Light scatters in all directions (for the most part) from the origin of a single point of event.

        No, a photon will travel in a straight line from it's point of origin unless acted upon by an outside force. You are describing what happens to the innumerable photons that are emitted from a typical light source which is not the same thing. The photons that we see from these distant sources have traveled a long distance in a straight line (*) to get to us.

        (* straight in this context is not the same Euclidean geometry straight line you might have learned about in high school)

        So if it happened 13 billions year ago, how is it still observable?

        Because the universe expanded [wikipedia.org] faster than the speed of light. Space itself is expanding to this day and so some light that was emitted a long time ago is just now reaching us. Some light that was emitted a long time ago will never reach us because it's too far away and space is expanding too fast for it to ever get to us.

        • A photon as a particle will travel in a straight line as you classically think, however it is also a wave and has uncertainty according to Heisenberg uncertainty. If you constrain the photons position, say by emitting it from a point and passing it through an arbitrarily small orifice, cementing position, momentum blows up and spreads it out. This is the source [stackexchange.com] of diffraction in slit experiments.
          • A photon as a particle will travel in a straight line as you classically think, however it is also a wave and has uncertainty according to Heisenberg uncertainty.

            This is true but not relevant to this particular discussion. A photon from Betelgeuse does not diffuse to both Alpha Centauri and our Sun in any practical sense. It's not a useful exercise to treat the uncertainty in the position of a photon in units of light years. Remember we are talking about photons we've actually observed through our eyes or through out measuring equipment.

            If you constrain the photons position, say by emitting it from a point and passing it through an arbitrarily small orifice, cementing position, momentum blows up and spreads it out.

            It doesn't spread out to distances measured in light years. And we are constraining the photon's position because we have obser

            • This is true but not relevant to this particular discussion. A photon from Betelgeuse does not diffuse to both Alpha Centauri and our Sun in any practical sense. It's not a useful exercise to treat the uncertainty in the position of a photon in units of light years. Remember we are talking about photons we've actually observed through our eyes or through out measuring equipment.

              It doesn't spread out to distances measured in light years. And we are constraining the photon's position because we have observed it.

              It's quite useful because it's possible and in many cases the most likely scenario. The distance of diffraction is dependent on the distance of observation from the constraint of position because it effectively "alters the course" of the photon by an angle as this page outlines [gsu.edu]. So it's quite possible a single photon can be emitted from from a point, pass through a tiny aperture, and diffract to either earth or alpha Centauri even though neither lines up with the point and aperture opening - you won't kn

    • I think they mean, edge of the observable universe.

      It's not so simple, as the light has limited speed anything we see is from the past, so there's a limit we can see even though the Universe might be infinite in size, because it's not infinite in time - the ultimate observable edge is the CMB (Cosmic Mircrowave Background radiation [wikipedia.org]), we cannot see anything beyond because the Universe was opaque before.

      So there's a point in saying "at the edge of the Universe", it means at the very early beginning, which in this case (this survey results) is very significan

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      I think they mean, edge of the observable universe.

      Isn't that edge the Cosmic microwave background [wikipedia.org] ?

      And wouldn't "near the beginning" of the universe be a better way to describe it than "edge"?

  • Holly (Score:4, Funny)

    by Knossos ( 814024 ) <knossos@@@gmail...com> on Monday March 18, 2019 @08:14AM (#58291582)

    It's always the way, innit? You hang around for three million years in deep space and there hasn't been one, then all of a sudden eighty three turn up at once.

    • by JazzXP ( 770338 )
      I was just thinking this and hoping they're not grit
    • Well, the thing about a black hole - its main distinguishing feature - is it's black. And the thing about space, the colour of space, your basic space colour, is black. So how are you supposed to see them?
      -- Holly, Marooned

  • If these (and millions more) are hard to see, and have large amounts of gravity, could it be that they're what's causing the universe to expand quicker than expected?

    • They are only hard to see directly and only hard to detect if not feeding or extremely far away. When they suck in large amounts of matter, they are among the most energetic events in the universe and can put out 10-40 times the energy of even the fusion in stars. This allows them to put out the same energy our sun would over its entire life of billions of years, but in only a few moments. So you can see them from farther off than anything else really, but when you are looking 10+ billion light years off
  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @09:33AM (#58291866)
    FTA:

    "Scientists aren't sure how black holes formed in the early universe, so being able to detect them this far back in time provides new avenues of exploration."

    A nice departure from the hyperbolic "Scientists are shocked to find...." or "Scientists scramble to find answers when the laws of physics are turned on their head!" sort of wording.

  • There was the arms race in that corner of the universe creating supermassive blackholes. One team was going one up over the other. And when the score was 41-42, one team got the ultimate answer. So they won and the tournament ended. That's how they ended up with 83.
  • What is the challenge in understanding early blackhole formation?

    If energy coalesced into enough matter that was close enough to other matter, wouldn't that be enough g to create a mass that collapses on itself?

    Shouldn't need a supernova to do that, right?
  • by Chris Mattern ( 191822 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @02:35PM (#58293548)

    And one restaurant.

  • billions of times the mass of the sun

    Much like the average slashdotter.

    inflation causes them to be further away than the actual visible universe

    Much like the distance from the average slashdotter to a vagina.

  • Seventy comments and no one has thought to post this? What's happened to Slashdot?

    https://youtu.be/N-_mHedypEU [youtu.be]

The biggest difference between time and space is that you can't reuse time. -- Merrick Furst

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