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If asked to name stupendously amazing things in space, most
people would probably pick black holes. These evil-tinged clowns of the
universe are definite wows. Insatiable is their middle name.
Grand and merciless, voracious and monstrous, pure appetite and deep mystery. The biggest fatten themselves in galaxy cores mainly via a seemingly limitless hunger for a main source of sustenance: fat, circular wads of gas that gather around the black holes and are sometimes given a name to delight any glutton, Polish doughnuts. Black holes cloak their innards behind an “event horizon,” from inside which no message can be sent (which explains the one-liner physics joke: “Two protons walk into a black hole”).
What a parade of jaw-droppers that is. Well listen up, this
just in: It looks like there is a limit to the superlatives. Black holes can’t
eat everything. If a new analysis from a Yale astronomer is correct, even black
holes run out of steam, and at a fairly precise point. The biggest black holes
may reach only a few tens of billions of times the mass of the sun.
To be sure, that’s huge. Most galaxies harbor central black holes of a few million solar masses (about 4 million for the Milky Way). Fifty million light-years away in Virgo, the giant elliptical galaxy M87 is believed to harbor one having about 3 billion solar masses. The record heft for a suspected black hole, 3.5 billion light-years away and part of a double–black-hole system with a partner’s orbit that reveals its mass with some precision, is 18 billion solar masses.
Any possible cap on the size of these monsters occupying
galactic centers shouldn’t diminish the place of black holes in popular
imagination. And for astronomers, the newly proposed mass limit illustrates how
the status of black holes, as both scientific challenge and principal player in
the universe’s appearance, is on the rise.
Astrophysicists and cosmologists thought they had black
holes pretty well pegged about 10 years ago. Black holes eat, they grow and
they can sure produce a bright light from X-ray to radio wavelengths while on a
binge. Their quasar-pumping conversion of matter to outward-beamed energy as
they consume gas, dust and the occasional unlucky star is believed to reach
about 40 percent efficiency. It’s not only E=mc2 at which black
holes excel. They also provide wonderful playgrounds for a panoply of other
Einsteinian gymnastics. They bend time, warp space and, along their borders,
they spawn a fizz of evanescent virtual particles popping in and out of space’s
fabric.
But all in all, to many pros interested in the big picture, black holes have been seen as intriguing and flashy character actors, bit players in the grand story of galaxy evolution and in the overall distribution of ordinary matter in the universe. Even supermassive black holes’ gravity, after all, dominates only a few parsecs radius in the crowded hearts of galaxies many thousands of parsecs across.
A consuming influence
A budding new paradigm is that black holes—in a dance of mutual self-regulation—may influence almost everything about galactic origins, growth, form and ultimate fates. They are not just the overstuffed kernels in the middle of galaxies. For reasons not fully understood, it appears that the sizes of central black holes and the masses of their galaxies, especially the central bulges, are almost perfectly in step.
The relation has become clear only since the late 1990s.
Even the halo mass of dark matter—the mysterious invisible stuff that seems to
make up more than 80 percent of all matter—around galaxies seems correlated
with the size of supermassive black holes in galactic centers. That is a
surprise. And when the black holes stop growing, galaxies themselves appear to
stop evolving. “Now, we think we cannot understand galaxies without
understanding black holes,” says Abraham “Avi” Loeb, director of the Institute
for Theory and Computation at the
The proposed limit on black hole mass comes from
Declaring an upper mass limit to black holes is notable,
even were such a limit not part of a bigger relationship to overall galactic
physics. For one thing, it would give bounds to the specs of the black hole
bestiary.
Ignoring hypothetical mini–black-holes of subatomic size that might briefly form under exotic conditions, astronomical black hole taxonomy would go like this, from smallest to largest: Substellar-mass or primordial black holes, still unproven, proposed by physicist Stephen Hawking to have formed in the dense soup of particles shortly after the Big Bang. A stellar-mass black hole is what remains after some supernovas. Intermediate-mass black holes, conjectured to form from runaway mergers of stars into dense clusters that undergo gravitational collapse, would be 100 to a million times as massive as the sun. Next up are supermassive black holes, which can grow as gas accretes into galactic centers and when galaxies hosting central black holes merge. The Milky Way’s central black hole, at 4 million solar masses, is supermassive. And at the top of the scale are ultramassive black holes, the name Natarajan gives those with 10 billion to a few tens of billion solar masses.
Natarajan, a native of
A basic picture of black hole growth had been worked out in
the 1970s and 1980s by Bohdan Paczynski of
The result can be a quasar that shines from a region smaller
than Earth’s orbit of the sun with a brilliance 100 times that of the rest of
the quasar’s host galaxy. To achieve such power, the quasar must be bumping up
against a barrier called the Eddington Limit. The limit’s namesake, English
astronomer Arthur Stanley Eddington, in the early 20th century worked out how
brightly a star can shine before its radiation pressure starts blowing its
outer layers into space. Turned around and applied to black holes, that limit
is the brightness at which a black hole’s accretion disk is so great that it
stops more gas from falling in. And to reach that, a quasar of a million solar
masses must nearly triple its mass every 10 million to 100 million years. By
the time it reaches a billion solar masses, it consumes 20 suns’ worth of gas
every year.
A quasar’s brightness is related to how much matter the black hole is consuming. When matter stops falling in, the light goes out. Each quasar shines for only a few hundred million years. But there was no obvious reason why galaxies should run short of gas to feed into Polish doughnuts that quickly.
Stunting growth
Working in a
For her thesis, Natarajan worked out another plausible way:
A quasar, fueled by a growing, supermassive black hole, reaches a point at
which its radiation not only slows the infall of more gas, but also turns the
gas around and clears out a large region around itself—leaving a nearly
gas-free or “dry” galaxy. This, she estimated, would occur as the black hole
reached about 10 billion solar masses.
With this theoretical exercise complete, Natarajan a few
years ago tackled another aspect of galactic behavior that would eventually
lead her back to how black holes might stunt their own growth. She worked with
Marta Volonteri—a former fellow
Observations with space telescopes had shown that quasars
started to pop off when the universe was less than a billion years old, and at
immense power. Small black holes cannot do the job. That takes black holes of
around a billion solar masses.
Earlier theorists had thought the seeds of galactic black holes were sown by the collapse of the first, immense “Generation III” stars, but those looked too puny to grow fast enough to get quasars going so soon. The two women joined a cadre of cosmologists imagining a direct-collapse model. In it, the first galaxies would form mostly from hydrogen and early stars within blobs of cold dark matter. And in these galaxies’ dense centers, gas would congregate so fast it would spiral directly into multimillion-mass black holes, not stopping to form stars first.
With their primordial dark matter blobs set up in their model—each with one or several galaxies and each of those equipped with sizable, often quasar-worthy black holes—the two scientists ran the process to the present time. Out came a universe with, sure enough, galaxies, galaxy clusters and black holes in the middles. But, as others have found, the model predicted more immense galaxies and more black holes of 10 billion solar masses and beyond than are actually evident in nearby (and therefore current) regions.
To be certain, Natarajan needed a more complete history of
quasars over the lifetime of the universe for closer comparison with the model,
so she could see better where reality and mathematical simulations had parted
ways. Her coauthor of the recent paper, Chilean astronomer Treister, gathered
the necessary stats from the ground-based Sloan Digital Sky Survey and from
some of the most powerful new telescopes in the heavens, including the Chandra
X-ray Observatory and
“This was the aha moment,” Natarajan says. Early models
showing that black holes can turn off their own feeding station were combined
with models of galaxy evolution and the populations of quasars and other active
galactic nuclei over time. “The only way to fit the data is to physically cut
off the ability of black holes to grow beyond some point, and that is at about
10 billion solar masses.”
Physically, she explains, the largest black holes reach the end of the line by heating gas not only in their own vicinity but, in a final stage of frenzied luminosity, heating gas throughout their enormous host galaxies and often among the galaxies of the clusters where they reside. Furthermore, it appears that black holes can keep the gas too hot to settle in large quantities back to the galaxy’s nucleus or to form stars through most of the galaxy’s bulk. Only in the past 10 years have other observations, in fact, revealed that the thin gas permeating massive galactic clusters is heated to tens of millions of degrees. “Nobody expected that,” says Harvard’s Loeb. “So galaxies reach the point where you don’t make stars. This must be intimately related to black hole growth and why it stops.”
Case closed? Not likely.
Natarajan expresses similar concern about those original seeds. “The big question that remains is the early merging history of dark matter halos. This has opened up an absolutely new theoretical simulation to see if we can understand the formation of those black hole seeds.” New instruments may help explore that question. Some answers may come in 10 years or so when a joint NASA and European trio of widely spaced satellites, called the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna or LISA, may detect the gravitational waves from black holes forming and coalescing in distant galaxies. That could provide vital info on the origin of the seeds for eventual, supermassive black holes.
While the scaffolding of a coherent hypothesis linking
galaxy evolution and massive black hole behavior is rising, it is not a
monument yet. Other questions loom as well. It remains a puzzle that objects of
such enormous difference in scale—gigantic galaxies and tiny (if massive) black
holes in their centers—seem to move in smooth coordination of growth and
evolution. Says
Then Volonteri adds, “Are black holes stopping the galaxies too? Or are the galaxies stopping the black holes?”
SIDEBAR: Black Hole Taxonomy
Black holes can be classified into categories based on size,
which depends directly on mass. Apart from small “primordial” black holes that
possibly formed in the early universe, the least massive are the size of a
large city; the largest are huge enough to reach from the sun out beyond
Stellar-Mass Black Holes
About 5 to 10 solar masses, formed when a massive star
exhausts its fuel, central pressure falls and the core collapses to black hole
density. (A shock wave blasts the rest of the star off in a supernova). The Hubble
Space Telescope image above is of a supernova remnant in the constellation
Cassiopeia.
SIZE: Roughly 30 kilometers across, or about 10 km longer
than
MASS: 5 suns
Intermediate-Mass Black Holes
About 100 to a million solar masses, conjectured to form in dense star clusters from a merger of stars into a giant mass that then undergoes runaway gravitational collapse.
SIZE: About 60,000 km across, or almost five times Earth’s
diameter. If a stellar-mass black hole were the size of the period at the end
of this sentence, this black hole would be about 2 feet across.
MASS: 10,000 suns
Supermassive Black Holes
From a million to a few billion solar masses, formed by
accretion of gas in galactic centers and by mergers of black holes as their host
galaxies collide. The Milky Way’s central black hole is in this group. The
above Hubble image shows the collision of two galaxies.
SIZE: About 25 million km across, it would fit within Mercury’s orbit around the sun. If a stellar-mass black hole were period-sized, this black hole would be 250 meters across.
MASS: 4 million suns
(central black hole in the Milky Way)
Ultramassive Black Holes
Newly proposed category for black holes from 10 billion to tens of billions of solar masses. At such sizes, the event horizon diameter can reach hundreds of billions of kilometers.
SIZE: 60 billion km across, it would stretch from the sun to
far past
MASS: 10 billion suns
Charles Petit is a freelance science writer based in
Berkeley,
Found in: Astronomy

"It still makes no sense to me that the size of a galaxy's central black hole is supposed to be 1/2% the mass of the galaxies they reside in.
The numbers for the Milky Way, with a black hole of 4 Million solar masses and the number of stars, 100 Billion to 400 Billion, mathematically is off by more than 2 orders of magnitude!
Does no one else have a problem with such a statement?"
- The central body of a galaxy is not "black hole". It is quasar (QSO).
QSO is a stellar gravedigger. Stars crossed QSO gravity pit are absorbed by it.
It is accretion during of which QSO emits very large power in very wide range: from gamma-quanta to radiowaves.
The mass of an old galaxy (the radiogalaxy) is mostly within central QSO (host-quasar) because most of stars have absorbed by that QSO.
After absorbtion all stars host-quasar heats surrounding aether, and QSO losts its stability and decays into radiation of cosmic gamma-rays, neutrons = electrons + protons (i.e. hydrogen) and alpha-particles (primary helium-4). Last is material of new stars, galaxies.
I have described this process in "Stellar evolution" http://bourabai.kz/evolution-e.htm and "Galactic evolution" http://bourabai.kz/evolution-e.htm papers.
"It still makes no sense to me that the size of a galaxy's central black hole is supposed to be 1/2% the mass of the galaxies they reside in.
The numbers for the Milky Way, with a black hole of 4 Million solar masses and the number of stars, 100 Billion to 400 Billion, mathematically is off by more than 2 orders of magnitude!
Does no one else have a problem with such a statement?"
I can't find that quoted mass relationship anywhere with a Google search. As for the other guy, yeah you Khazakhs launch rockets, but you sure seem to be lacking on your understanding of physics. And that translation is just awful. Here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasar
That should help a bit. Quasars are phenomena of active galactic nuclei, which means a black hole actively sucking in vast quantities of gas. Also, no, they do not exist in all galaxies. There are plenty of examples of galaxies without an active nucleus. Also, that taxonomic classification of black holes is certainly not in any reasonable way comparable to demonology. It is a classification based strictly on size. I've never studied demonology, but I assume they don't use any organization as rational as that.
The numbers for the Milky Way, with a black hole of 4 Million solar masses and the number of stars, 100 Billion to 400 Billion, mathematically is off by more than 2 orders of magnitude!
Does no one else have a problem with such a statement?
Really there are no "black holes" in the nature.
Myth of "black holes" itself appear in that times, when was considered that the light participates in gravitational interaction and it is possible moving the ray of light on paths of cone-shaped section as weighty body.
Described above things are quasars, not "black holes". This is proved by alive classic astrophysics Dr. Halton Arp http://bourabai.kz/arp/index.html.
The real taxonomy of quasars includes 6 evolutionary types, on count of of electronic shells of material ruined by gravitation, see "Supercompressed States of Material and Quasars" http://bourabai.kz/quasars-e.htm
The taxonomic division of quasars was discovered by Karlsson more than 30 years ago in observing of quantization of its redshifts.
The real quasars are not mythical objects of cosmogonic past and cosmological distances. These objects exist in all galaxies.
For more details of quasar and other celestial bodies evolution see our site: http://bourabai.kz/index.html
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