Ever wonder how many black holes are nearby? Well, NASA has gone and counted them for you. According to data gathered by NASA’s Swift satellite, there are about 200 supermassive black holes within about 400 million light-years of the Earth. Swift’s first job is to scan the skies for gamma ray bursts, but during downtime, the spacecraft hunts for objects that emit X-rays. And supermassive black holes are one of the most powerful sources of X-rays out there.
NASA scientists using the Swift satellite have conducted the first complete census of galaxies with active, central black holes, a project that scanned the entire sky several times over a nine-month period.
The all-sky survey contains more than 200 supermassive black holes called Active Galactic Nuclei, or AGN, and provides a definitive census of black hole activity in the local universe. The team uncovered many new black holes that were previously missed, even in well-studied galaxies, and other surprises as well.
“We are confident that we are seeing every active, supermassive black hole within 400 million light years of Earth,” said Jack Tueller of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., who led the effort. “With each passing month, we are able to probe deeper into the universe, and the census becomes richer.”
AGN have a mass of millions to billions of suns, which are confined within a region about the size of our solar system. The term “active” refers to the process of actively pulling in gas and whole stars and generating copious amounts of energy from a tiny galactic core in the process. Examples include quasars and Seyfert galaxies.
Swift was built primarily to study gamma-ray bursts. During waiting times between bursts, Swift’s Burst Alert Telescope, which is sensitive to the highest-energy X-rays, scans the sky. AGN generate X-rays as well as many other forms of light. Many AGN, however, are hidden behind dust and gas, which block lower-energy light, such as visible light. Because higher-energy X-rays are so penetrating, Swift can detect AGN missed by other surveys, allowing for an unbiased count.
Nearly every massive galaxy seems to have a supermassive black hole, but only a few percent appear to be active. Our galaxy’s central black hole is dormant, and this and similar black holes are not included in the Swift census. All black holes were likely once active, and why some remain active and others are dormant in the modern, local universe is a mystery.
“You can’t understand the universe without understanding black holes,” said Richard Mushotzky of Goddard, a census team leader. “Perhaps as much as 20 percent of all of the radiated energy in the universe—most X-rays, large fractions of ultraviolet and infrared light, and a good deal of radio waves—arise in one way or another from AGN activity.”
One key census finding is the discovery of AGN in starburst galaxies, which are bright from star formation. These dust-enshrouded AGN, uncovered by Swift, will enable a detailed test of the idea that black hole activity and star formation go hand in glove, feeding each other. Swift also sees hints of cocooned black holes, so embedded in dust that they are completely invisible except in the higher-energy X-ray band.
The initial census results, from data collected in 2005, are a “first taste of things to come,” Tueller said. Each scan of the sky is stacked atop existing scans, equivalent to a long camera exposure, so black holes from deeper in the universe will eventually be detected.
Swift builds upon two other surveys. The European INTEGRAL satellite completed a high-energy X-ray survey earlier in 2006, although this focused on the galactic plane and not the whole sky. NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory conducted a lower-energy X-ray survey of a small fraction of the sky, providing a sample of the more-luminous black holes that formed in the early universe.
Swift also carries X-ray and ultraviolet/optical telescopes, enabling quick confirmation of new active galaxy candidates. This broad coverage in three wavelength regimes is critical for black hole studies.
“The Swift black hole catalogue can be used in a thousand ways,” said Craig Markwardt of Goddard and the University of Maryland, who combined the nine-month Swift data into all-sky images. “It’s hard to believe the whole sky is peppered with black holes. You need powerful X-ray vision like Swift’s to see them.”
Launched in November 2004, Swift is a NASA mission managed by Goddard in partnership with the Italian Space Agency and the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council, United Kingdom. Penn State University personnel control science and flight operations. NASA Goddard built the Burst Alert Telescope.
A NASA Goddard team presents this census at a press conference today in San Francisco at the American Astronomical Society’s High Energy Astrophysics Division meeting.
Original Source: NASA News Release
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