Science

Black hole breaks records, swallows up scientific theory

Scientists say they have discovered a black hole so big that it challenges the theory about how they grow.

Supermassive black hole at centre of a quasar is 12 billion times more massive than the sun

With measurements indicating it is 12 billion times more massive than the Sun, the new black hole, seen in an artist's conception, challenges a widely accepted hypothesis about black hole growth rates. (Zhaoyu Li/Shanghai Astronomical Observatory)

Scientists say they have discovered a black hole so big that it challenges the theory about how they grow.

Scientists said this black hole was formed about 900 million years after the Big Bang.

But with measurements indicating it has 12 billion times the mass of the sun, the black hole challenges a widely accepted hypothesis of growth rates.

Current theory is for a limit to how fast a black hole can grow, but this black hole is too large for that theory.- Fuyan Bian, Australian National University

"Based on previous research, this is the largest black hole found for that period of time," Fuyan Bian, Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Australian National University (ANU), told Reuters on Wednesday.

"Current theory is for a limit to how fast a black hole can grow, but this black hole is too large for that theory."

The creation of supermassive black holes remains an open topic of research. However, many scientists have long believed the growth rate of black holes was limited.

The newly discovered quasar SDSS J0100+2802 is the one with the most massive black hole and the highest luminosity among all known distant quasars. (Zhaoyu Li/Shanghai Astronomical Observatory; background image from Yunnan Observatories)

Black holes grow, scientific theory suggests, as they absorb mass. However, as mass falls toward the black hole, it will be heated, creating radiation pressure, which pushes the mass away from the black hole.

"Basically, you have two forces balanced together which sets up a limit for growth, which is much smaller than what we found," said Bian.

The black hole was discovered by a team of global scientists led by Xue-Bing Wu at Peking University, China, as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which provided imagery data of 35 per cent of the northern hemisphere sky.

The ANU is leading a comparable project, known as SkyMapper, to carry out observations of the Southern Hemisphere sky.

Bian expects more black holes to be observed as the project advances.