PARIS: One of the largest black holes ever recorded has been discovered using a new technique that could spot thousands more of the insatiable celestial monsters in the coming years, according to astronomers. The ultramassive black hole, one of just four ever observed, is more than 30 billion times the mass of the Sun, a new study said. It is the first black hole ever observed using a phenomenon called gravitational lensing, in which light travelling towards us from a distant galaxy appears to magnify and bend inwards, giving away the presence of a dark giant.
Supermassive black holes sit at the center of galaxies using their vast gravitational pull to gobble up stars like specks of dust, not even allowing light to escape. Previous black holes of this size have been observed when their voracious devouring gives off huge amounts light at the margins -- or by measuring the orbit of stars that speed up as they pass by. But these techniques only work for galaxies relatively close to Earth.
Landscape to 'dramatically change'
Gravitational lensing allows astronomers to "discover black holes in the other 99 percent of galaxies that are currently inaccessible," Nightingale said. There are currently around 500 known gravitational lenses -- at least one of which we now know is a supermassive black hole. But "the landscape is about to dramatically change," Nightingale said. The European Space Agency's Euclid mission, planned to launch into space in July, will open a "big data era" for black hole hunters by creating a huge high resolution map of the universe, he said.
In the next six years Euclid could find 100,000 new gravitational lenses, which would potentially point towards thousands of previously hidden black holes, Nightingale added. For the latest discovery, the researchers used computer simulations and images from the Hubble Space Telescope to confirm their findings, as well as eliminating other possibilities such as an overconcentration of dark matter.
The huge size is also consistent with what would be expected for a black hole at the center of its giant host galaxy, Nightingale said. The mass of all the stars in the galaxy, dubbed Abell 1201, is more than a trillion times that of our Sun, meaning it would be expected to have a particularly large black hole at its center. The study was published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on Tuesday.