The Universe is not as violent a place as we thought, an Australian astronomer has found.
Dr Alister Graham from the Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the Australian National University in Canberra has published his research in the latest edition of Astrophysical Journal Letters.
"Galactically
speaking, things seem to be a little bit safer out there," said Graham,
whose research supports the idea that the number of violent encounters
between large galaxies is around one-tenth the number suggested by
earlier studies.
When two galaxies collide, the supermassive
black holes (black holes 10,000 to one million times the mass of the
Sun) at their centre go into a binary orbit around a central
gravitational well. As this orbit decays, the black holes get closer
and their combined massive gravitational pull strips the mass from
nearby stars.
Stars continue to be eaten up until the amount of
mass stripped from them is equal to or bigger than the combined mass of
the black holes.
In the past, direct observations of galaxies
suggested that there would have to have been multiple collisions to get
enough mass to produce the size of the black holes seen at the centre
of galaxies.
But, said Graham, researchers had only been looking at galaxies which were the product of collision.
"People had never carefully looked at the galaxies that hadn't been disrupted and had their centres stripped away," said Graham.
Using
the Hubble Space Telescope, Graham studied a sample of galaxies 100
million light years away. He compared the mass of black holes at the
centre of collided galaxies, with the amount of star material available
in galaxies that were not the product of collisions.
He found
that there was enough mass in the stars of an ordinary galaxy to
produce a supermassive black hole in as little as just one collision
with another galaxy.
"In the past we thought we needed about 10
collisions to cause the damage we thought we were observing around
black holes," he said.
Graham's research provides the first
direct evidence to support a theory that astronomers have been using
for over a decade in their models of the Universe.
But before this, their observations didn't fit the theory.
It
gives astronomers more confidence that their modelling of the Universe
is "going down the right track", said Graham, who did his research
while at the University of Florida.
Universe a bit safer than we thought
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Wednesday, 29 September 2004
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Two spiral galaxies collide, bringing two black holes together (Image: NASA and Hubble Heritage Team (StscI))
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