Astronomy

Hubble Sees Two Quasars Side by Side in the Early Universe

When it comes to the brightest, most powerful objects in the Universe, not much can beat a Quasar. A Gamma Ray Burst from a supernova might be more energetic, but doesn’t last very long. Quasars, by comparison, can churn out 1000 times the radiation of the Milky Way, and keep doing it for hundreds of millions of years.

They get all this energy from the supermassive black holes that live at the center of galaxies. As material falls towards the black hole, an accretion disk forms around it: a swirling cloud of energetic material which heats up through friction and releases electromagnetic radiation. The resulting Quasar can be so bright it drowns out the light from the rest of its galaxy from our perspective.

On April 5th, researchers announced the discovery of a rare double quasar in the early Universe. The two quasars are gravitationally bound, spiraling in towards each other. Their host galaxies are in the process of merging, and the supermassive black holes generating the quasars will also eventually collide and merge.

“We’re starting to unveil this tip of the iceberg of the early binary quasar population,” said Xin Liu, a researcher from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in a press release. “This is the uniqueness of this study. It is actually telling us that this population exists, and now we have a method to identify double quasars that are separated by less than the size of a single galaxy.”

A Hubble Space Telescope photograph of a pair of quasars that existed when the universe was just 3 billion years old. Credits: NASA, ESA, Yu-Ching Chen (UIUC), Hsiang-Chih Hwang (IAS), Nadia Zakamska (JHU), Yue Shen (UIUC).

As bright as quasars are, detecting – and interpreting – the signals received from distant quasars is not easy. This pair of quasars existed just three billion years after the Big Bang, during a time period known as cosmic noon: the era between 10 and 11 billion years ago when star formation in the Universe was at its peak. They are very, very distant objects.

It took a large collaboration and a half dozen telescopes to achieve this result. The two objects are named after their Sloan Digital Sky Survey designations J0749 + 2255, and were identified as a double quasar using the European Space Agency’s Gaia spacecraft. Confirming the characterization of the object required observations in infrared from both the Hubble Space Telescope and the W.M. Keck Observatories in Hawaii. Additional information about the objects in other wavelengths were gathered using International Gemini Observatory (optical and near-infrared), the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (radio), and NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (X-ray).

Like putting together a puzzle, each wavelength offered different information about the quasars, and helped researchers understand what was going on in this distant binary galaxy system.

Hubble’s powerful resolution also allowed them to rule out the possibility that they were actually just seeing the same quasar twice due to the wonky effects of gravitational lensing.

The double quasars J0749 + 2255 are so close together that they are separated by less than the space of a single galaxy, so resolving them at a distance of 10-11 billion light years away is an incredible feat.

NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman telescope will be an ideal tool for finding more examples of double quasars. It will have a similar resolution to Hubble, but with a wider field of view to image more of the sky at once.

With a larger sample size, astronomers will be able to make better models of galactic evolution in the early Universe.

Learn More:

Hubble Unexpectedly Finds Double Quasar in Distant Universe.” NASA.

Yu-Ching Chen et al. “A close quasar pair in a disk–disk galaxy merger at z = 2.17.” Nature.

Featured Image: An artist’s concept of two quasars residing in the cores of two galaxies in the process of merging. Credits: NASA, ESA, Joseph Olmsted (STScI).

Scott Alan Johnston

Scott Alan Johnston is a science writer/editor at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, a contributor at Universe Today, and a historian of science. He is the author of "The Clocks are Telling Lies," which tells the story of the early days of global timekeeping, when 19th-century astronomers and engineers struggled to organize time in a newly interconnected world. You can follow Scott on Twitter @ScottyJ_PhD

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