Colliding black holes could warp space-time itself
A team of prominent researchers has discovered what appears to be the
start of two massive black holes at the centers of their own galaxies
beginning to collide.
Such an event should come as no surprise, considering that there are up to 200 billion galaxies in the universe (according to Space.com),
so two of them are bound to bump into each other from time to time. In
fact, astronomers have already observed the merging of galaxies (as seen
in the image above), but they've never before witnessed the end-stage
process of galaxy commingling, which results when the two central black
holes smash into each other, releasing some pretty violent cosmic
fireworks that could warp space-time itself.
An artist's rendering of what two black holes inside a quasar might look like.
Santiago Lombeyda/Caltech Center for Data-Driven Discovery
The researchers, including scientists from Caltech and NASA's Jet
Propulsion Lab, have theorized that an unusual light signal they're
seeing from quasar PG 1302-102 -- essentially a black hole emitting
light from the superheated particles swirling around its gravitational
drain -- is being caused by the cosmic dance between two black holes in
the system, each located less than the length of our solar system apart.
The theory was published this week in the journal Nature.
While other cosmic phenomena could explain the light signature,
the scientists became confident that their theory is the most likely
after analyzing the quasar's light spectrum.
"When you look at the emission lines in a
spectrum from an object, what you're really seeing is information about
speed -- whether something is moving toward you or away from you and how
fast. It's the Doppler effect," Eilat Glikman, study co-author and assistant professor of physics at Middlebury College in Vermont said in a statement.
"With quasars, you typically have one emission line, and that line is a
symmetric curve. But with this quasar, it was necessary to add a second
emission line with a slightly different speed than the first one in
order to fit the data. That suggests something else, such as a second
black hole, is perturbing this system."
If the theory is correct, study co-author S. George Djorgovski of the California Institute of Technology told The New York Times
that when the two black holes collide, they could release the energy
equivalent to 100 million supernova explosions, which would rip apart
the galaxy in which they're floating. The collision would also release
gravitational waves, ripples in the fabric of space-time predicted by
Einstein's theory of general relativity, Djorgovski told the Times.
Unfortunately, astronomers hoping to witness such an event are
out of luck, as the predicted union won't take place for about another
million years -- a long time in human standards, but not cosmic ones. Of
course, the universe itself already knows whether the theory is correct
because the light we're seeing from this system, located in the Virgo
constellation, comes from 3.5 billion light years away -- meaning
everything we're witnessing already took place billions of years ago.
But until we come up with our own way to warp the space-time continuum, I
guess we'll just have to wait and see.
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