'Baby black hole' offers insight into cosmic enigma'
This
composite image released by the Nasa on November 15 shows a supernova within
the galaxy M100 that may contain the youngest known black hole in our cosmic
neighborhood. In this image, the location of the supernova, known as SN 1979C,
is labeled.
WASHINGTON
(AFP) - – Astronomers on Wednesday announced they had found the youngest black
hole ever found in Earth's cosmic neighbourhood, a discovery offering a rare
chance to probe one of the mightiest and strangest forces in the Universe. The
black hole is believed to be a remnant of SN 1979C, a supernova in the galaxy
M100, some 50 million light years from Earth, which was spotted by an amateur
skygazer in 1979.
The supernova
itself was a mega-star some 20 times greater than the Sun that collapsed in
upon itself before creating a black hole -- a gravitational force so strong
that not even light can escape. As there is no visual clue to a black hole, the
phenomenon was spotted thanks to a steady glow of X-ray radiation detected by
US and European orbital observatories from 1995 to 2007. The discovery will
give scientists a grandstand view of how a black hole develops from infancy,
NASA said.
It could also
unlock knowledge about huge stars explode, which ones give birth to black holes
or neutron stars, and how many black holes there may be in our galaxy and
elsewhere. Many new black holes have been discovered in the distant Universe,
but they have been spotted thanks to a signature blast of gamma-ray radiation. SN
1979C, though, is different, as it is closer to Earth and belongs to a class of
supernova that is unlike to be associated with a gamma-ray burst. If so, that
will back a common theory about how most black holes are formed.
Finding it
was an extraordinary stroke of luck, as normally decades of X-ray observations
would be needed to make the confirmation. "If our interpretation is
correct, this is the nearest example where the birth of a black hole has been
observed," said lead researcher Daniel Patnaude, from Harvard-Smithsonian
Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts.
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