The Citizen (KZN)

What ignites large celestial objects

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– Astronomer­s said on Wednesday that for the first time, they have confirmed what ignites quasars, the brightest and most powerful objects in the universe, which put galaxies in their “death throes”.

These celestial behemoths form when two galaxies smash into each other, the astronomer­s said, warning that this could be the Milky Way’s fate in a few billion years.

Quasars are one of the most extreme objects in the universe, some shining with the brightness of a trillion stars despite being packed into the space of our solar system.

They sit in the heart of galaxies, powered by supermassi­ve black holes, requiring a huge amount of gas to be so staggering­ly bright.

But exactly what creates quasars has been a matter of debate since their discovery in the 1950s.

In a new study, an internatio­nal team of researcher­s said they have “clear evidence” that quasars are triggered by two galaxies colliding, which releases the vast amounts of energy needed.

Clive Tadhunter, an astrophysi­cist at the University of Sheffield in the UK and one of the study’s authors, said this could be the fate of the Milky Way one day.

The nearby Andromeda Galaxy is “coming directly towards us at about 200 kilometres a second,” he said. It will collide with the Milky Way in roughly five billion years and “we could get a quasar” as a result, he said.

Quasars push out all the gas from a galaxy, preventing any new stars from forming, he added.

The researcher­s compared observatio­ns of 48 galaxies with quasars at their centre to 100 without them. Galaxies hosting quasars were three times as likely to have had collisions with other galaxies, the study said. While the theory that such collisions ignited quasars has been around for decades, it was difficult to prove.

Tadhunter said this was because observatio­ns had often been carried out with telescopes that were optimised to look at objects in the centre of galaxies, but were less effective at spotting the distorted features at their edges that indicate past collisions.

For example, these diffuse structures “get washed out” when observed by the Hubble Space Telescope, he said. So the team used land-based observator­ies, such as the Isaac Newton Telescope on the Spanish island of La Palma.

The new study, published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomic­al Society, also reviewed previous research to show how it may have missed the tell-tale signs of collisions.

Tadhunter said that quasars “act like beacons to the distant universe” because of their incredible brightness. The James Webb Space Telescope, which has a much bigger aperture than Hubble, could help reveal more about quasars, when the universe was in its infancy, he said. –

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