ahar...@earthlink.net
 Rogue black holes may roam the galaxy

URL to an interesting article from Fox news
_http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,518598,00.html_
(http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,518598,00.html)

I really like the title.  I wonder if there are tame black  holes.

Reminds me of the  story The Doomsday Effect by TK Wren

First few paragraphs
"
Hundreds of massive black holes left over from the early  universe may
wander the Milky Way, according to new calculations.
These _rogue black holes_
(http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/080109-aas-rogue-black-holes.html) 
are thought to have  originally lurked at the
centers of tiny, low-mass galaxies. Over billions of  years, those dwarf
galaxies smashed together to form full-sized galaxies like  the Milky Way.
The idea of such wandering black holes _has been suggested before_
(http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astronomy/blackhole_010913.html) , 
but a new
computer  simulation calculated that hundreds of them should be left over,
and predicted  that they might now be shrouded by small star clusters.
"These black holes are relics of the Milky  Way's past," said researcher
Avi Loeb of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for  Astrophysics. "You could say
that we are archaeologists studying those relics to  learn about our 
galaxy's
history and the formation history of black holes in the  early universe."
_•  Click here to visit FOXNews.com's Space Center._
(http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/space/)

It appears that Earth is safe. The closest  rogue black hole should reside
thousands of light-years away.
Astronomers are eager to locate them for the  clues they will provide about
the formation of the Milky Way, since they are  thought to date from the
universe's galaxy-building days.
Back then, whenever two young galaxies with  central black holes collided,
their black holes would _merge to form a single black hole_
(http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astronomy/blackhole_merges_020208.html) 
. In the
chaos of the merger, the black hole could be flung out toward the edges of 
the
galaxy, the new computer model shows.
It predicts that hundreds of such black  holes would still be around today
in the _outer reaches of the Milky Way_
(http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/070524_wandering_bhole.html) , each 
containing the mass of 1,000 to
100,000 suns.

They would be difficult to spot on their  own, though, because a black hole
is not visible. They can be detected, however,  when matter they're about
to swallow is superheated as it accelerates  inward.
Another telltale sign could mark a rogue  black hole: a surrounding cluster
of stars yanked from the dwarf galaxy when the  black hole escaped. Only
the stars closest to the black hole would be tugged  along, so the cluster
would be very compact.
These clusters are so small that each looks  like a single star from far
away. Thus, astronomers will have to use tricks to  distinguish them, such 
as
separating the light from the clusters into its  component colors to
discover the individual stars hiding inside.
"The surrounding star cluster acts much like  a lighthouse that pinpoints a
dangerous reef," said Harvard-Smithsonian Center  for Astrophysics' Ryan
O'Leary, who co-wrote the paper. "Without the shining  stars to guide our 
way,
the black holes would be all but impossible to  find."

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