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Really cool!

http://www.brightsurf.com/news/headlines/view.article.php?ArticleID=20533

Voracious black holes hide their appetite in dusty galaxies

August 08, 2005


A UK-led team of astronomers reports today (August 4th) in Nature that
they have tracked down an elusive population of black holes growing
rapidly hidden behind clouds of dust. Their results suggest that most
black hole growth takes place in dusty galaxies, solving astronomer's
headaches, as until now, the cosmic x-ray background suggested the
existence of more growing black holes than they could find.

Growing black holes, known as quasars, are some of the brightest objects
in the Universe and are seen by the light emitted as gas and dust spiral
into the black hole. Quasars are situated in the inner-most regions of
galaxies and can consume the equivalent mass of between ten and a thousand
stars in one year! Astronomers believe that all quasars are surrounded by
a dusty ring which hides them from sight on Earth in about half of cases.

However, examining the cosmic x-ray background, which is made up primarily
of the emissions from quasars, astronomers realised that there should be
many more obscured quasars than currently known. Objects surrounded by
dust are hard to see with visible light, so the astronomers looked at
infrared wavelengths, which are less likely to be reflected away. Using
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope's First Look Data, they were able to find a
new population of obscured quasars. The new quasars have no spectra that
can be seen and are thought to be hidden behind the dust of the galaxy
itself rather than just a dust ring. The presence of lots of dust in a
galaxy indicates that stars are still forming there. The researchers found
21 examples of these lost quasars in a relatively small patch of sky. All
of the objects were confirmed as quasars by the National Radio Astronomy
Observatory's Very Large Array radio telescope, New Mexico, and the
Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council's William Hershel
Telescope on La Palma.

Alejo Martinez-Sansigre from the University of Oxford explains "We were
missing a large population of obscured quasars, which had been inferred
from studies at X-ray frequencies. This newly discovered population is
large enough to account for the X-ray background, and now we wish to find
out why there are more obscured quasars than unobscured ones".

>From their study, the team believes that there are more quasars hidden by
dust than not and that most black holes grow in short, efficient bursts at
the heart of growing galaxies.

Professor Richard Wade, Chief Executive of the Particle Physics and
Astronomy Research Council which supports the University of Oxford
Astrophysics group said "The new population of Quasars suggest that
throughout cosmic history most black holes grow in the heart of dusty
active galaxies with stars still forming."

Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council



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