At the center of the Milky Way Galaxy,
there is a dormant supermassive black hole — but new research shows
that the galactic core has not always been in a quiet slumber.
The center of the Milky Way
was once incredibly active, with a superenergetic quasar feeding the
galaxy’s central black hole. However, 6 million years ago, the Milky
Way’s black hole marked its transition to hibernation with the explosion
of the quasar, and shock waves from that explosion can still be seen
today, according to scientists with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
CfA researchers were searching for some elusive matter that is
thought to be missing from the Milky Way when they discovered evidence
of these shock waves. [Dark Matter Missing From Milky Way Galaxy
(Video)]
The Milky Way galaxy is estimated to be 1 trillion to 2 trillion
times more massive than the sun, according to CfA researchers. Most of
that mass (about five-sixths) is dark matter, while the remaining mass
consists of normal matter — gas, dust and stars. Even still, when
astronomers add up all of the visible matter in the Milky Way, something
doesn’t quite add up. Between 85 billion and 235 billion solar masses’
worth of material appears to be missing, the researchers said in a
statement.
“We played a cosmic game of hide-and-seek, and we asked ourselves,
‘Where could the missing mass be hiding?'” Fabrizio Nicastro, lead
author of the new study and a CfA research associate, said in the
statement. “We analyzed archival X-ray observations from the [European
Space Agency’s] XMM-Newton spacecraft and found that the missing mass is
in the form of a million-degree gaseous fog permeating our galaxy. That
fog absorbs X-rays from more distant background sources.”
Our Solar System’s Location In the Milky Way Galaxy
Using measurements of X-ray absorption and computer models, the
researchers were able to calculate how much normal matter was there and
how it was distributed. However, they discovered their observations
couldn’t be explained by a smooth, uniform distribution of gas.
Instead, the researchers found that the gas was blown outward by the
exploding quasar at the center of the Milky Way. Their findings suggest
that this explosion occurred about 6 million years ago and that the
shock waves created by the event created a gasless “bubble.” Without
gas, dust and stars to gorge on, the galactic core became inactive.
It would have required a lot of energy to create the “bubble,” which
the researchers said likely came from gas feeding the black hole. During
this feeding frenzy, some infalling gas was swallowed by the black
hole, while other gas was pumped out at speeds of 2 million mph (3.2
km/h), the researchers said.
The material that flowed toward the black hole then would have
accumulated to create new stars. Researchers found evidence of this in
the presence of 6-million-year-old stars near the galactic center that
are made of the same material, according to the new study, published Aug. 29 in The Astrophysical Journal.
“The different lines of evidence all tie together very well,” Martin
Elvis, co-author of the study and a researcher at the CfA, said in the
statement. “This active phase lasted for 4 [million] to 8 million years,
which is reasonable for a quasar.”
The new study also shows that this million-degree gas weighs up to
130 billion solar masses, which could help to explain where all the
galaxy’s missing mass is — it’s too hot to be seen, the researchers
said.
Although this discovery does not completely solve the mystery of the
Milky Way’s elusive mass, it does give researchers a better
understanding of the galaxy’s composition and evolution.
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