Three giant black holes at the center of one galaxy

At the center of any galaxy that wants to be taken seriously, a mysterious giant is lurking – a supermassive black hole, often with a mass of millions to billions of solar masses. The center of our Milky Way has a gravitational monster, Sagittarius A*, which has sucked up the mass of more than four million stars the size of our Sun.

But in terms of the universe, that’s almost nothing. Astronomers have now identified three supermassive black holes in the irregular galaxy NGC 6240 as reported by the University of Göttingen. NGC 6240 is about 330 million light-years from the Solar System in the constellation Ophiuchus and has a diameter of about 300,000 light-years. Its irregular shape indicates that it was formed a relatively short time ago – perhaps only 30 million years ago – in a gigantic collision of galaxies.

Apparently not only two, but three galaxies merged. Their former centers, three giant black holes, are now located at the relatively small distance of 3000 light-years from each other. This is very convenient for astronomers: previously, it was thought that galaxies should have needed more time to reach their current state, but if more than two galaxies regularly collide at one time, this would naturally accelerate the rate of evolution sufficiently.

Astronomers are also looking forward to future gravitational wave measurements. The three giant black holes are already close enough that our descendants will certainly be able to detect a few powerful gravitational waves from the collisions expected in a few million years. Strictly speaking, the three objects probably already collided long ago – but the consequences of those collisions need at least 330 million years, due to the large distance, until we can detect them.

NGC 6240 in a composite image made from images from the Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes.
The irregular galaxy NGC 6240. New observations show that it has not two, but three supermassive black holes at its center. The northern black hole (N) is active and was known before. The new, enlarged image with higher spatial resolution shows that the southern component is made up of two supermassive black holes (S1 and S2). The green color indicates the distribution of gas that is ionized by the radiation around the black holes. The red lines show the contours of starlight from the galaxy and the length of the white line corresponds to 1000 light-years. (image: P. Weilbacher (AIP), NASA, ESA, the Hubble Heritage (STScI/AURA)-ESA/Hubble Collaboration, and A. Evans (University of Virginia, Charlottesville/NRAO/Stony Brook University))

2 Comments

Leave a Reply to Brandon Q. Morris Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

BrandonQMorris
  • BrandonQMorris
  • Brandon Q. Morris is a physicist and space specialist. He has long been concerned with space issues, both professionally and privately and while he wanted to become an astronaut, he had to stay on Earth for a variety of reasons. He is particularly fascinated by the “what if” and through his books he aims to share compelling hard science fiction stories that could actually happen, and someday may happen. Morris is the author of several best-selling science fiction novels, including The Enceladus Series.

    Brandon is a proud member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America and of the Mars Society.