Astronomers find monster black hole devouring a sun's-worth of matter every day

United States News News

Astronomers find monster black hole devouring a sun's-worth of matter every day
United States Latest News,United States Headlines

Ben Turner is a U.K. based staff writer at Live Science. He covers physics and astronomy, among other topics like tech and climate change. He graduated from University College London with a degree in particle physics before training as a journalist.

Scientists have spotted the brightest and fastest-growing quasar ever seen — a monster black hole that's devouring a sun's-worth of material every day. The brightly burning object, named J0529-4351, weighs between 17 billion and 19 billion solar masses and is located 12 billion light-years from Earth — meaning it dates to a time when the universe was only 1.

5 billion years old. Black holes are born when giant stars collapse in on themselves, and they grow by devouring all they encounter — be it gas, dust, stars, planets or other black holes. Friction can cause the material spiraling into the maws of these gluttonous space-time ruptures to heat up, which emits light that can be detected by telescopes, turning them into so-called active galactic nuclei . The most extreme AGNs are quasars — supermassive black holes that are billions of times heavier than the sun and shed their gaseous cocoons with light blasts trillions of times more luminous than the brightest stars. The quasar initially showed up in a 2022 survey by the European Space Agency's Gaia spacecraft, which has been mapping the positions and movements of the Milky Way's roughly 2 billion stars. However, as quasars often burn at least as brightly as stars, J0529-4351 was initially misidentified as one. After searching for potentially misidentified black holes in the survey, the researchers behind the new study, which they published Feb 19 in the journal Nature, found J0529-4351 hiding in plain sight. Further observations by the Very Large Telescope in the Atacama Desert confirmed that the bright object is a gigantic quasar, not a star. RELATED STORIES—James Webb Telescope spots galaxies from the dawn of time that are so massive they 'shouldn't exist'—What's the biggest black hole in the universe? By measuring the quasar’s perceived brightness and adjusting for its distance from Earth, the researchers estimated that the object was burning with the power of roughly 50 trillion suns . This intense burn is owed to the fact that J0529-4351 is so big and consuming material so fast that it is very close to the Eddington limit — an upper limit on how bright an object can be given its size, according to the study authors. The researchers hope that by studying the monstrous object they can both learn how quasars grew to such inexplicable sizes, as well as get better at distinguishing the monsters from among the brightest stars. "Although their luminosity implies rapid growth, their existence is hard to explain," the researchers wrote in the paper."When black holes start from the remnant of a stellar collapse and grow episodically within the Eddington limit, they are not expected to reach the evident masses in the time from the Big Bang to the epoch of their observation, which has triggered a search for alternative scenarios."

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

LiveScience /  🏆 538. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Astronomers See 18 Examples of Stars Getting Torn Apart by Black HolesAstronomers See 18 Examples of Stars Getting Torn Apart by Black HolesSpace and astronomy news
Read more »

Photographer Turns the Lens on Amateur Astronomers Who Contribute to SciencePhotographer Turns the Lens on Amateur Astronomers Who Contribute to ScienceA photographer spent five years traveling the world to turn the lens on amateur astronomers who have contributed to science.
Read more »

Astronomers discover massive protocluster around luminous quasarAstronomers discover massive protocluster around luminous quasarAstronomers from the Steward Observatory in Tucson, Arizona and elsewhere report the detection of a new massive protocluster. The structure was found around a luminous quasar known as J0910–0414. The discovery was detailed in a paper published February 2 on the pre-print server arXiv.
Read more »

House Intel Chair Mike Turner Warns of ‘Serious National Security Threat’ to U.S. in Cryptic StatementHouse Intel Chair Mike Turner Warns of ‘Serious National Security Threat’ to U.S. in Cryptic StatementSource of breaking news and analysis, insightful commentary and original reporting, curated and written specifically for the new generation of independent and conservative thinkers.
Read more »

Jennifer Lopez’s “Dear Ben, Pt. II” Lyrics Meaning, ExplainedJennifer Lopez’s “Dear Ben, Pt. II” Lyrics Meaning, ExplainedOur lyrics breakdown of Jennifer Lopez's 'Dear Ben, Pt. II,' the sequel to her original 2002 song, 'Dear Ben.'
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-05-15 10:15:49