Astronomers Discover Link Between Supermassive Black Holes And
Galaxy Formation
A pair of astronomers from Texas and Germany have used a
telescope at The University of Texas at Austin's McDonald
Observatory together with Hubble Space Telescope and many other
telescopes around the world to uncover new evidence that the
largest, most massive galaxies in the universe and the
supermassive black holes at their hearts grew together over
time.
Two giant elliptical galaxies, NGC 4621 and NGC 4472, look
similar from a distance, as seen on the right in images from the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey. But zooming into these galaxies' cores
with Hubble Space Telescope reveals their differences (left,
black and white images). NGC 4621 shows a bright core, while NGC
4472 is much dimmer. The core of this galaxy is populated with
fewer stars. Many stars have been slung out of the core when the
galaxy collided and merged with another. Their two supermassive
black holes orbited each other, and their great gravity sent
stars careening out of the galaxy's core. (Credit:
NASA/AURA/STScI and WikiSky/SDSS)
"They evolved in lockstep," said The University of Texas at
Austin's John Kormendy, who co-authored the research with Ralf
Bender of Germany's Max-Planck-Institute for Extraterrestrial
Physics and Ludwig Maximilians University Observatory. The
results are puiblished in this week's issue of Astrophysical
Journal Letters.
Astronomers know that galaxies, those vast cities of millions or
billions of stars, grow larger through collisions and mergers.
Kormendy and Bender's work involves the biggest galaxies in the
universe--"elliptical galaxies" that are shaped roughly like
footballs and that can be made of as many as a thousand billion
stars. Virtually all of these galaxies contain a black hole at
their centers, that is, an infinitely dense region that contains
the mass of millions or billions of Suns and from which no light
can escape.
A current leading theory says that when galaxies collide, their
black holes end up revolving around each other. Together, the
two black holes act like an egg beater: They violently stir up
the galaxy center with their incredibly strong gravity, and they
fling stars out of the central regions. As the black hole pair
sinks to the center of the new merger remnant, this
supergalaxy's core is depleted of the stars that were flung
away. Kormendy and Bender measured the resulting dimming of such
galaxies' cores, their so-called "light deficits."
Light deficits in galaxy cores are surprising in view of decades
of work by many astronomers, including Kormendy and Bender,
which showed that the biggest elliptical galaxies contain the
most massive black holes at their centers. These are monsters
"weighing in" at a billion or more times the mass of our Sun.
They attract the stars around them with ferociously strong
gravity. Astronomers expected that such big black hole would
yank the galaxy's stars into a tiny, dense cluster at the
center. But observations in the 1980s with ground-based
telescopes and much better observations in the 1990s with Hubble
Space Telescope revealed the opposite. The biggest galaxies have
big, fluffy, low-density centers. Why are giant black holes not
surrounded by dense cluster of stars? Where did the missing
stars go?
The theory that black hole binaries gravitationally slingshot
the stars out of galactic centers has been the popular but
unproved explanation. No telescope observations provided
compelling evidence--until now.
"Our new observations are a strong and direct link between black
holes and galaxy central properties," Kormendy says. "They are a
'smoking gun' that connects black holes with the formation of
the surprisingly fluffy centers of giant elliptical galaxies."
Kormendy and Bender made detailed studies of 11 such galaxies in
the Virgo Cluster. To get a comprehensive overall picture of
each galaxy, they used the wide field of view of the Prime Focus
Camera on McDonald Observatory's 0.8-meter Telescope. They used
Hubble Space Telescope to study these same galaxies' cores in
great detail. Many other telescopes were used to connect the
central data from Hubble with the outer data from the McDonald
telescope. The results on 27 elliptical galaxies in the Virgo
Cluster measured by Kormendy, Bender, and their University of
Texas colleagues David Fisher and Mark Cornell, and supported by
the National Science Foundation, are scheduled for publication
in a forthcoming issue of the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Series.
Their precision measurements of the brightnesses--that is, the
number of stars--at various distances from the centers of
elliptical galaxies allowed them to calculate much more
accurately than previously the masses of stars that are
"missing" in the centers of the biggest ellipticals. This
revealed more surprises: The missing mass increases in lockstep
with the measured masses of the central black holes. It was
known that the two quantities are related, but it was not known
that the correlation is so tight as to be within the margin of
error. That is, the correlation is virtually perfect.
The missing mass also increases in lockstep with another galaxy
property that is known to be tied directly to black holes,
namely the speeds at which stars move far out in the galaxy
where they cannot feel the black hole's gravity.
"Astronomers love tight correlations," Bender says. "They tell
us what is connected with what. The new observations give us
much stronger evidence that black holes control galaxy
formation, at least at their centers."
According to Linda Sparke, NSF program director for astronomical
sciences, "This valuable research shows how black holes grow
along with the galaxy. This is big news. We've long accepted
that black holes are not scattered randomly in galaxies. The
most luminous galaxies harbor the most massive black holes. But
we haven't known just how the black hole and the galaxy
influence each other. Kormendy and Bender have seen the
footprint of merging pairs of black holes in the centers of huge
elliptical galaxies, revealing evidence that the largest black
holes form after smaller galaxies collide to produce one larger
system."
Kormendy finally adds, "We have long believed that black holes
power quasars in galactic nuclei--they are the brightest objects
in the universe. And we have come to suspect that putting giant
black holes at the centers of young galaxies and shining so much
quasar light on them affects galaxy formation. In other words,
we suspect that the study of quasars and the study of galaxies
are really one subject. We can't understand one without
understanding the other.
"We think we have helped to merge these subjects by connecting
black holes directly to galaxy structure." he said. "John Muir
famously said that everything is hitched to everything else in
the world. As we find that different subjects are hitched
together, we build a theory of galaxy formation that we
confidently believe."