杏吧原创

‘Perfect’ spiral galaxy may harbour dark secret

The picturesque galaxy seems to boast two colossal black holes instead of the usual one, yet fails to emit the radiation expected by astronomers
The spiral galaxy M83 may harbour two supermassive black holes
The spiral galaxy M83 may harbour two supermassive black holes
(Image: ESO)

A picture-perfect spiral galaxy may harbour two colossal black holes instead of the usual one, new observations suggest. But if it does, astronomers are mystified as to how the second black hole got there without ruining the galaxy鈥檚 spiral structure.

Most galaxies are thought to contain a single large black hole with a mass proportional to that of its galaxy. But galaxies grow through collisions, and astronomers believe their black holes also merge over time.

Two galaxies appear to contain pairs of black holes. These galaxies emit telltale X-rays when superhot matter falls towards the massive objects.

But now a trio of astronomers, led by Dami谩n Mast of Argentina鈥檚 National University of Cordoba, says there may be two black holes inside the galaxy M83, which lies about 15 million light years away 鈥 even though it does not emit these X-rays.

Such a possibility was first raised in 2000 by another team in Germany. That team studied the motion of the galaxy鈥檚 stars along the line of sight between Earth and M83, discovering two concentrations of mass, or 鈥渘uclei鈥. One shone brightly while the other 鈥 which lay closer to the apparent centre of the galaxy 鈥 was dim. The team suggested that gas and dust were blocking light from the second object, which they thought might be the galaxy鈥檚 true centre 鈥 around which gas and stars circle.

Millions of Suns

Now, Mast鈥檚 team has studied the motion of ionised gas near M83鈥檚 centre. They used the data to better locate the two knots of matter, which appear to lie about 200 light years from one another.

They also estimated the knots鈥 masses, with the bright one containing the equivalent of five million Suns and the dark one 10 million Suns. By comparison, the Milky Way鈥檚 central black hole has the mass of about four million Suns.

Those masses, along with a previous observation of an arc of star formation near the galaxy鈥檚 centre, led the team to consider the possibility that the nuclei are supermassive black holes. The team thinks the high stellar birth rate may have been kick-started by the dark nucleus travelling through dense gas 鈥 an event that could arise in a galactic merger. The event may have begun about eight million years ago 鈥 the age of the oldest stars in the arc.

Galactic blob

But the team is careful not to call these objects 鈥渂lack holes鈥, acknowledging they could instead be massive clusters of stars.

David Merritt, an astrophysicist at the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York, US, doubts the galaxy contains two black holes. Black holes with their masses would be born in galaxies of roughly equal size, he says. And mergers between two such equals would probably result in a galaxy shaped more like a blob 鈥 not a 鈥渃lassic鈥 spiral such as M83, he says.

鈥淢y guess is there is one black hole at the site of the obscured nucleus, and the other bright nucleus is just a clump of star-forming gas,鈥 he told New 杏吧原创.

The research was posted on an online preprint server on 13 May.