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    Rare Black Hole Survives Galaxy's Destruction

    Like a fossil hinting at a long-gone animal, a black hole is offering clues about a now-destroyed galaxy that may once have existed around it.

    The Hubble Space Telescope recently spied a cluster of young blue stars surrounding a rare mid-weight black hole that suggests the black hole was once at the center of a dwarf galaxy. Astronomers think this galaxy was torn apart by the gravity of a larger host galaxy that it orbited.

    The violent encounter would have stripped away most of the dwarf galaxy's stars, but it also could have compressed the gas around its central black hole, triggering a new wave of star formation. It is these new stars that Hubble recently saw signs of.

    The observations suggest that the young stars must be less than 200 million years old, meaning the collision between the parent galaxy and its dwarf likely occurred around that time.

    "The fact that there's a very young cluster of stars indicates that the intermediate-mass black hole may have originated as the central black hole in a very low-mass dwarf galaxy,"Sean Farrell, of the Sydney Institute for Astronomy in Australia, said in a statement. "The dwarf galaxy was then swallowed by the more massive galaxy." [When Galaxies Collide: Photos of Great Galactic Crashes]

    Besides revealing clues about the lost galaxy, the black hole itself, called HLX-1 (Hyper-Luminous X-ray source 1), is scientifically interesting, researchers said.

    When Farrell and his colleagues discovered HLX-1in 2009, it was the first intermediate-mass black hole known. Scientists think it may represent a class of middleweight black holes that are the building blocks for the supermassive black holes lurking at the center of most large galaxies, including our own Milky Way.

    "This black hole is unique in that it's the only intermediate-mass black hole we've found so far. Its rarity suggests that these black holes are only visible for a short time," said Mathieu Servillat, a member of the research team who conducted his work at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass.

    This specimen contains the mass of about 20,000 suns, and is located roughly 290 million light-years from Earth. In comparison, the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way is as massive as 4 million suns.

    By studying this rare middleweight black hole, scientists hope to learn more about how they, and their larger supermassive brethren, form.

    "For the first time, we have evidence on the environment, and thus the origin, of this middle-weight black hole," Servillat said.

    The researchers report their findings in the Feb. 15 issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

    You can follow SPACE.com assistant managing editor Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcomand on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    45 comments

    • Gudelos  •  3 months ago
      Nice! I love learning new things about the cosmos. Keep up the great work scientists!
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, United States  •  3 months ago
      It was I, Zod, who destroyed the galaxy, puny earthlings! Your pitiful galaxy obstructs my view of Yeeb248, so you will be obliterated next! Prepare to die!
      • BigMike 3 months ago
        Damnit, this is my galaxy. you feel lucky, punk? go ahead... make my aeon...
        Clint Eastwood
      • ANDROLOMA 3 months ago
        There is no Zod; there is only Zule.
    • Randolph  •  Salem, United States  •  3 months ago
      Lost a galaxy Obi-Wan has, how embarrassing!
      • Timmay 3 months ago
        Lost a galaxy Obi-Wan has, embarrassing this is!

        Remember, Yoda spoke in assbackwards language.
      • Cheeses K. Reist 3 months ago
        If you write a compound sentence in German, and then translate each word in to English without changing the word order, it sounds exactly like how Yoda speaks.
    • OMG  •  3 months ago
      Beam Me up Scotty, nothing but trolls here...
      • ANDROLOMA 3 months ago
        Seeking intelligent life, and what did you find instead? You need to seek in better places.
    • “Just Because”  •  3 months ago
      And blue holes survived earths environmental destruction! See any correlations?
    • DoubleL  •  3 months ago
      Which Galaxy absorbed the dwarf galaxy this black hole is a remnant of? And wouldn't this cluster still be near that galaxy?
    • Tom  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  3 months ago
      How does a galaxy get destroyed? Just curious.
      • lockjaw1 3 months ago
        doesnt get destroyed it just collides with another one and they merge, so basically the bigger one is always the winner and steals the smaller ones stars, guess even galaxies have bullies!
      • Tom 3 months ago
        Oh cool cool. Thanks.
      • Neandertaler 3 months ago
        Big fish eat little fish.
    • ANDROLOMA  •  Sunnyvale, United States  •  3 months ago
      Black holes are the universe's way of showing goatse to humanity.
    • L.G.  •  McMinnville, United States  •  3 months ago
      C00L
    • Nicki  •  South Bend, United States  •  3 months ago
      Survives galaxy's destruction, eh? Isn't that why the galaxy is destroyed? Black holes eat galaxies as far as I understand. And duh, it will EVENTUALLY eat itself in the process.. I don't really see what is so surprising about this.. If there is an astro-physicist in the house to correct me, please do. I would like to know if I am missing something..
    • Bill  •  3 months ago
      There are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
    • Plenum  •  Madrid, Spain  •  3 months ago
      And who else thinks that the most likely thing to survive a galactic collision WOULD BE the galax(y/ie)'s black hole(s)? Seems to me that this Black Hole probably fared rather well swallowing a few suns every now and then. Really, I have yet to hear of a black hole's destruction. This entire article, seems to me, to be an effort, again to confuse science by those who would benefit from the demise of science itself. These articles are becoming all too common.
    • Jon Soto  •  Encino, United States  •  3 months ago
      Let's throw all the trolls in the black hole for entertainment and watch them spaghettify.
    • Tyler  •  3 months ago
      If these stars are 290 million light years away, and they're 200 million years old, then shouldn't we not be able to observe them for another 90 million years?
    • ChangeAmerica  •  Owensboro, United States  •  3 months ago
      Blackholes are like the GOP they eat all the good stuff and give nothing back.
    • Rich  •  Virginia City, United States  •  3 months ago
      This story sounds like the Republican presidential race of today.
    • eddie ouzo  •  Indian Springs, United States  •  3 months ago
      turn on your vacum and see the same thing.oh yea dont forget to walk around and move your arm back and forth thats the only way you can swallow the other galaxy good luck
    • ANDROLOMA  •  Sunnyvale, United States  •  3 months ago
      I remember my Christian training from church, about how God had to be real in order to form such an orderly, perfect universe. I still chuckle at that old fiction.
    • Sh8d  •  Bala-Cynwyd, United States  •  3 months ago
      i thought i was the only one that read this.
    • cantdrive85  •  Denver, United States  •  3 months ago
      So many contradictions, so little time.
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