News on Galaxies
- A deeper look at Centaurus A giant galaxy
- Hubble observes nebulae in distant dwarf galaxy
- Overfed black holes shut down galactic star-making
- The eye of the storm in a galaxy-cluster
- A galaxy that is both slim and round
- The Milkyway have a strange structure associated with it
- Hundreds of Blazars
- Colliding galaxy-clusters
- 'Time machine' will study the early universe
- The heart of a cosmic collision
- Starbursts in early galaxies not caused by mergers
- The Sun align with the Orion galaxy-arm
- Discovery of an unusaul rectangular galaxy
- 200.000 galaxies in just ONE image
- The most excotic known galaxy
- Spider web of star formations in distant galaxy
- Series of quasars acting as gravitational lenses
- Mapping of dark matter around a galaxy-cluster
- Intergalactic recycling
- Discovery of a change in galaxies growth
- Galaxies el'Dorado
- The dans of galaxies in the Hercules galaxy-cluster
- Discovery of hidden very early galaxy-cluster
- The Antlia dwarf galaxy ...
- Dark matter in the core of the galaxy cluster
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Supermassive black holes may be leftovers from quasars
Friday, 09 December 2011 13:17
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| Astronomy - Galaxies |
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Recently an international team of astronomers discovered 2 gigantic black holes with masses about 10 billion times the mass of our Sun. These black holes have a mass more than 50% greater than any other previously measured. Astronomers from University of Toronto belives they may the remains of the Quasars that dominates early universe, but later disappeared. “They may be the dormant remains of quasars that were extremely luminous billions of years ago,” says Professor James Graham, director of the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of Toronto and founding member of the team behind the discovery. Using several telescopes - the Gemini Observatory, the MacDonald Observatory and the Keck Observatory - the scientists measured the speed of stars orbiting in these galaxies, thereby measuring the strength of the gravitational field of the black hole. Source: University of Toronto |




