Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Universe's most distant quasar found, powered by massive black hole
30 June 2011 [14:18] - Today.Az
A team of European astronomers has used the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope and a host of other telescopes to discover and study the most distant quasar found to date. This brilliant beacon, powered by a black hole with a mass two billion times that of the Sun, is by far the brightest object yet discovered in the early Universe. The results will appear in the June 30, 2011, issue of the journal Nature.
"This quasar is a vital probe of the early Universe. It is a very
rare object that will help us to understand how supermassive black holes
grew a few hundred million years after the Big Bang," says Stephen
Warren, the study's team leader.
Quasars are very bright, distant galaxies that are believed to be
powered by supermassive black holes at their centres. Their brilliance
makes them powerful beacons that may help to probe the era when the
first stars and galaxies were forming. The newly discovered quasar is so
far away that its light probes the last part of the reionisation era
[1].
The quasar that has just been found, named ULAS J1120+0641 [2], is
seen as it was only 770 million years after the Big Bang (redshift 7.1,
[3]). It took 12.9 billion years for its light to reach us.
Although more distant objects have been confirmed (such as a
gamma-ray burst at redshift 8.2 and a galaxy at redshift 8.6), the newly
discovered quasar is hundreds of times brighter than these. Amongst
objects bright enough to be studied in detail, this is the most distant
by a large margin.
The next most-distant quasar is seen as it was 870 million years
after the Big Bang (redshift 6.4). Similar objects further away cannot
be found in visible-light surveys because their light, stretched by the
expansion of the Universe, falls mostly in the infrared part of the
spectrum by the time it gets to Earth. The European UKIRT Infrared Deep
Sky Survey (UKIDSS) which uses the UK's dedicated infrared telescope [4]
in Hawaii was designed to solve this problem. The team of astronomers
hunted through millions of objects in the UKIDSS database to find those
that could be the long-sought distant quasars, and eventually struck
gold.
"It took us five years to find this object," explains Bram Venemans,
one of the authors of the study. "We were looking for a quasar with
redshift higher than 6.5. Finding one that is this far away, at a
redshift higher than 7, was an exciting surprise. By peering deep into
the reionisation era, this quasar provides a unique opportunity to
explore a 100-million-year window in the history of the cosmos that was
previously out of reach."
The distance to the quasar was determined from observations made with
the FORS2 instrument on ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT) and
instruments on the Gemini North Telescope [5]. Because the object is
comparatively bright it is possible to take a spectrum of it (which
involves splitting the light from the object into its component
colours). This technique allowed the astronomers to find out quite a lot
about the quasar.
These observations showed that the mass of the black hole at the
centre of ULAS J1120+0641 is about two billion times that of the Sun.
This very high mass is hard to explain so early on after the Big Bang.
Current theories for the growth of supermassive black holes predict a
slow build-up in mass as the compact object pulls in matter from its
surroundings.
"We think there are only about 100 bright quasars with redshift
higher than 7 over the whole sky," concludes Daniel Mortlock, the
leading author of the paper. "Finding this object required a painstaking
search, but it was worth the effort to be able to unravel some of the
mysteries of the early Universe."
Notes
[1] About 300 000 years after the Big Bang, which occurred 13.7
billion years ago, the Universe had cooled down enough to allow
electrons and protons to combine into neutral hydrogen (a gas without
electric charge). This cool dark gas permeated the Universe until the
first stars started forming about 100 to 150 million years later. Their
intense ultraviolet radiation slowly split the hydrogen atoms back into
protons and electrons, a process called reionisation, making the
Universe more transparent to ultraviolet light. It is believe that this
era occurred between about 150 million to 800 million years after the
Big Bang.
[2] The object was found using data from the UKIDSS Large Area
Survey, or ULAS. The numbers and prefix 'J' refer to the quasar's
position in the sky.
[3] Because light travels at a finite speed, astronomers look back in
time as they look further away into the Universe. It took 12.9 billion
years for the light from ULAS J1120+0641 to travel to telescopes on
Earth so the quasar is seen as it was when the Universe was only 770
million years old. In those 12.9 billion years, the Universe expanded
and the light from the object stretched as a result. The cosmological
redshift, or simply redshift, is a measure of the total stretching the
Universe underwent between the moment when the light was emitted and the
time when it was received.
[4] UKIRT is the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope. It is owned by
the UK's Science and Technology Facilities Council and operated by the
staff of the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hilo, Hawaii.
[5] FORS2 is the VLT's FOcal Reducer and low dispersion Spectrograph.
Other instruments used to split up the light of the object were the
Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) and the Gemini Near-Infrared
Spectrograph (GNIRS). The Liverpool Telescope, the Isaac Newton
Telescope and the UK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) were also used to
confirm survey measurements. /Science Daily/
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