Oldest Black Hole in Universe Discovered: Insights from Astrophysicists at the University of Cambridge

2024-01-19 21:12:06

A British study conducted by an international team of astronomers announced, on Wednesday, the discovery of the oldest black hole, whose existence dates back to an era when the universe was barely 400 million years old.

Astrophysicist at the Kavli Institute of Cosmology at the University of Cambridge, Britain, Jan Schulz, said that this discovery postpones the date of the oldest massive black hole by “regarding 200 million years.”

The co-author of the study published in the journal Nature pointed out that this study “will feed a new generation of theoretical models” to explain the existence of a similar phenomenon in the young universe, more than 13 billion years ago.

The mass of this black hole is estimated at 1.6 million times the mass of the Sun. It is invisible, like all black holes, and absorbs the matter surrounding it by emitting a huge amount of light in its surroundings, according to the study.

The light enabled the discovery of the galaxy with the black hole at its heart, which was named “GN-z11” when its discovery was announced in 2016 using the Hubble Space Telescope.

GN-z11 was then the oldest galaxy observed by Hubble, and thus the most distant… until the James Webb Space Telescope came into use in 2022, which made it possible to discover the black hole in GN-z11.

This discovery is in addition to other discoveries made available by the James Webb Telescope, which reveal a young universe that includes objects brighter than expected.

The black hole discovered by the international team led by the University of Cambridge dates back to 430 million years following the Big Bang. It is the period of cosmic dawn, when the first stars and galaxies were born at the end of the so-called “dark” ages.

Several scenarios

The problem for a black hole this size is understanding how it might grow so fast. It usually takes hundreds of millions or billions of years with those discovered later.

The astrophysicist at the Paris Institute of Astrophysics, Stephane Charlot, a participant in the study, explains to Agence France-Presse that its characteristics “indicate faster and earlier growth than the growth of other black holes known in ancient times.”

Therefore, “the mechanisms of black hole formation in the young universe might be different from those we know in the closer universe,” Charlo said.

If we stick to classical scenarios, “the universe is too small to host such a massive black hole, so we have to think of other ways for it to appear,” says Roberto Maiolino, an astrophysicist at the University of Cambridge and the first author of the study, in statements reported by a statement.

Theorists imagine that such a body was born “large” from the explosion of a massive star at the end of its life, or from the rapid concentration of a cloud of dense gas, without going through the stage of star formation.

Once born, the black hole GN-z11 may have devoured the surrounding gas to grow rapidly. All this is more easily done, because “observations seem to indicate a high density of this gas,” according to Charlo.

The study published in the journal Nature does not rule out any of these scenarios, according to Jan Schulz, who is counting on the extraordinary observational capabilities of the James Webb Telescope to shed light on this phenomenon.

“We can expect to discover other objects when we have a greater number of in-depth observations of larger parts of the sky,” says the astrophysicist.

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