3月7日 (星期五)13°C 92
  news
 
日期:

Fast-moving stars reveal supermassive black hole

7/3/2025 6:24
The Large Magellanic

Cloud is a dwarf galaxy residing near our Milky Way, visible to

the naked eye as a luminous patch of light from Earth's southern

hemisphere and named after Portuguese explorer Ferdinand

Magellan, who observed it five centuries ago. New research is

now providing a fuller understanding of the makeup of our

galactic neighbor.



A study based on the trajectory of nine fast-moving stars

observed at the fringes of the Milky Way provides strong

evidence for the existence of a supermassive black hole inside

the Large Magellanic Cloud. Most galaxies are thought to have

such a black hole at their core, but this represents the first

evidence for one within the Large Magellanic Cloud.



According to the researchers, data on the trajectory of

these stars indicates they were flung out of the Large

Magellanic Cloud after a violent close encounter with this black

hole. Black holes are exceptionally dense objects with gravity

so strong that not even light can escape.



The Large Magellanic Cloud is located about 160,000

light-years from Earth, making it among the closest galaxies to

the Milky Way. That makes this the nearest supermassive black

hole to us aside from the one called Sagittarius A*, or Sgr A*,

situated at the heart of the Milky Way. Sgr A* is about 26,000

light-years from Earth. A light-year is the distance light

travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).



Just as the Milky Way is much more massive than the Large

Magellanic Cloud, Sgr A* is much more massive than the newly

identified black hole, which is among the least massive of any

supermassive black holes known. Sgr A* has a mass roughly 4

million times greater than the sun's. This one has a mass about

600,000 times greater than the sun's.



Sgr A*, in turn, is dwarfed by some supermassive black holes

detected in other large galaxies such as one with a mass 6.5

billion times greater than that of the sun in a galaxy called

Messier 87. That one and Sgr A* are the only two black holes

ever imaged by astronomers.



The new study focused on a class of stars called

hypervelocity stars. They are produced when a binary star system

- two stars gravitationally bound to each other - ventures too

close to a supermassive black hole.



"The intense gravitational forces tear the pair apart. One

star is captured into a tight orbit around the black hole, while

the other is flung outward at extreme velocities - often

exceeding thousands of kilometers per second - becoming a

hypervelocity star," said Jesse Han, a doctoral student in

astrophysics at Harvard University and lead author of the study

being published in the Astrophysical Journal and made public on

Thursday.



The sun travels through space at about 450,000 miles per

hour (720,000 kph) while hypervelocity stars do so at several

times that speed.



The researchers used data from the European Space Agency's

Gaia space observatory that has tracked more than a billion

stars in our galaxy with unprecedented precision.



There are 21 known hypervelocity stars in the Milky Way.

Astronomers have confidently identified the origins of 16 of

them, tracking seven of them back to Sgr A* at our galaxy's core

and the other nine back to the Large Magellanic Cloud.



"The only plausible explanation is that the Large Magellanic

Cloud harbors a supermassive black hole in its center as well,

analogous to Sgr A* in our galaxy," Han said.



"The Large Magellanic Cloud, given its mass and structure,

is totally expected to have a supermassive black hole of this

mass. We just needed to find the evidence for it," Han said.

"It's fun and exciting, but also something that really does make

sense."



Until now, the closest known supermassive black hole from

beyond the Milky Way was the one inside the Andromeda galaxy,

about 2.5 million light-years from Earth. It is the nearest

major galaxy to the Milky Way.



"The Large Magellanic Cloud is one of the best-studied

galaxies, yet this supermassive black hole's existence was only

inferred indirectly by tracing the origins of fast-moving stars.

We have more work to do to actually pinpoint the location of the

black hole," said Caltech astronomer and study co-author Kareem

El-Badry.



|

回主頁關於我們 使用條款及細則版權及免責聲明私隱政策聯絡我們

Copyright 2025© Metro Broadcast Corporation Limited. All rights reserved.