Giant Black Hole

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Giant Black Hole
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Cetus, the whale or sea monster, stands low in the southwest as night falls. The constellation is faint. But its brightest star, Diphda, is fairly easy to pick out, to the lower right of Venus, the “evening star.”

Cetus is far from the glow of the Milky Way — the band of light that outlines the disk of our home galaxy. That provides a better view of the galaxies beyond the Milky Way. In fact, a giant cluster of galaxies is near Diphda. And one of those galaxies is home to the biggest black hole yet discovered.

Abell 85 consists of more than 500 galaxies. The one at the center is a monster — it’s much bigger and heavier than the Milky Way. It’s an old galaxy whose stars are spread fairly evenly, so it looks a bit like a fuzzy football.

But there are fewer stars in the galaxy’s heart than expected, so the core looks faint. By measuring the motions of the stars that are in the galaxy’s heart, astronomers in Germany discovered why: A black hole that’s 40 billion times the mass of the Sun sits right in the middle. It’s the heaviest black hole seen to date.

The black hole may have grown so monstrous during the merger of two galaxies. As the black holes in those galaxies came together, they whipped up the space around them like batter in a blender. Many of the stars around them were flung away from the core of the merging galaxies. That left the center of the combined galaxy with fairly few stars — but with a single giant black hole.

Script by Damond Benningfield

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