Friday, February 28, 2014

Can monster black holes kill galactic star formation?

Supermassive black holes could be quenching star formation in elliptical galaxies, forcing them to appear "red and dead," a new study reports.

Astronomers have long wondered why giant elliptical galaxies stop forming stars, becoming dominated over time with small, long-lived stars with a distinctive reddish tinge. Conventional wisdom had held that these galaxies lack the cold gas necessary for star birth.

But new observations suggest that a rethink is in order. Some big ellipticals do indeed harbor large amounts of cold gas — but these reservoirs likely get heated up or driven off by powerful jets of material blasted out by supermassive black holes, which lurk at the heart of most if not all galaxies.

The study's lead author Norbert Werner of Stanford University and his colleagues studied eight giant elliptical galaxies using the European Space Agency's Herschel Space Observatory. They found that six of the eight have lots of cold gas, which Herschel detected as far-infrared emissions from carbon ions and oxygen atoms.

The team then investigated the galaxies' stockpiles of hotter gas, looking at optical images as well as X-ray data gathered by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.

They determined that, in the six galaxies with large quantities of cold gas, the hotter stuff is cooling down, as predicted by theory — but the cooling process has stopped for some reason. In the two galaxies without cold gas, the hot material seems not to be cooling down at all, researchers said.

Click here to read more or look at stunning pictures of a black hole here.

Four new Earth-like planets discovered

The search for 'Earth 2.0' – another watery planet with life – has come a step closer with the discovery of 715 planets orbiting stars beyond our own solar system, according to NASA scientists.

The latest results from NASA's programme to find "exoplanets" lend further support to the idea that the Milky Way – which is just one galaxy of many billions – is teeming with planets, many of which are similar to our own.

Scientists identified the new planets using a new statistical method to analyse data gathered by the €438m Kepler telescope, which was launched in 2009. This has almost overnight boosted the total number of confirmed exoplanets in the Milky Way to about 1,700 – with another 3,500 candidate planets waiting to be confirmed. The total number of habitable exoplanets has now reached nine.

The very first extra-solar planet was identified about 20 years ago and since then, there has been a revolution in the way that astronomers can identify the tiny perturbations in starlight they create as they orbit their own stars.

To read more, click here.