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Astronomers can't agree on what this cosmic oddity is

How scientists make sense of a streak of light in the cosmos.
By Elisha Sauers  on 
Hubble observing a cosmic oddity proposed to be a runaway black hole
Astronomers thought they found a runaway black hole, an unprecedented discovery. But many scientists doubt the findings, searching for simpler explanations. Credit: NASA / ESA / Hubble

If astronomers say they found a supermassive black hole sprinting 4 million mph away from its original galaxy, it's going to raise a few eyebrows.

Last month, The Astrophysical Journal Letters published a paper on a Hubble Space Telescope observation that described a bonkers scenario: a gigantic black hole traveling so fast it wasn't gobbling up stars and planets so much as it was lighting up space with a shimmery trail stretching 200,0000 light-years behind it. Pieter van Dokkum, an astronomy professor at Yale University, thought as the black hole plowed through an enormous cloud of gas, it must have been igniting new stars. NASA helped spread the word(opens in a new tab) of his team's weird and seemingly unprecedented finding.

"Like the wake behind a ship, we’re seeing the wake behind the black hole,” he said in a statement(opens in a new tab) in April.

But this idea was a little too outlandish for some, setting alight skepticism in the scientific community, with many researchers pondering other possible explanations. For one group at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias in Spain, the answer cuts like Occam's razor: What if that "trail" is just a galaxy, and we're just seeing it from the side rather than face on?

Jorge Sanchez Almeida, lead author of a study that rebuts the runaway black hole hypothesis, said his team's explanation is so much simpler.

"The motions, the size, and the quantity of stars fits what has been seen in galaxies within the local universe," he said in a statement(opens in a new tab).

His group's analysis was recently published in a letter to the editor(opens in a new tab) of the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics. If Almeida's team is right, it would make the cosmic feature something pretty ordinary by the universe's standards — a "bulgeless" galaxy(opens in a new tab), lacking a large collection of stars in the middle. Meanwhile, van Dokkum continues to hold tight to his black hole argument.

Comparing the cosmic object to a well-known bulgeless galaxy
The cosmic oddity, top, is compared to two images of a well-known bulgeless galaxy, middle and bottom, to show how similar they are in the new group's study. Credit: ESA / NASA / Hubble

The new letter states that if it were a galaxy, it would be considered quite long, but it wouldn't be particularly rare. Thousands of this kind of galaxy — sometimes called "flat" or "thin" — are already known, the authors wrote. Its size is comparable to the Milky Way, though most galaxies as ancient as this thing, estimated to be 8 billion years old, are smaller.

To support their conclusion, the team compared the cosmic object to another galaxy without a bulge, IC5249(opens in a new tab), and found it was strikingly similar. The mystery object had about the same mass, and its velocities were consistent with galaxy rotation. Put another way, the team believes if it walks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck.

"Indeed, it is a galaxy, which behaves like a galaxy," said Ignacio Trujillo, a co-author.

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Coming to this conclusion was bittersweet for Almeida. Runaway black holes have been predicted, even though no such fugitive has been discovered yet, he said: It would have been thrilling if this were the first.

Van Dokkum, on the other hand, hasn't given up on his original hypothesis. He is continuing his research, still believing what he found is a black hole on the lam.

A black hole fleeing through space
Runaway black holes have been predicted, even though no such fugitive has been discovered and confirmed. Credit: NASA / ESA / Leah Hustak (STScI) illustration

Recently, he used a new far-ultraviolet light image to observe that the alleged "wake" can be traced all the way back to an origin galaxy, suggesting that the two are connected. A follow-up paper(opens in a new tab), now available on a preprint server, will be published in Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society.

Despite the new team's confidence, it's not an open-and-shut case. Scientists are planning more telescope observations to further study the oddity. And van Dokkum doesn't shy away from discussing the opposing arguments in his latest paper(opens in a new tab).

"The interpretation of this object will likely remain a topic of debate for some time," he wrote.

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Elisha Sauers

Elisha Sauers is the space and future tech reporter for Mashable, interested in asteroids, astronauts, and astro nuts. In over 15 years of reporting, she's covered a variety of topics, including health, business, and government, with a penchant for FOIA and other public records requests. She previously worked for The Virginian-Pilot in Norfolk, Virginia, and The Capital in Annapolis, Maryland, now known as The Capital-Gazette. She's won numerous state awards for beat reporting and national recognition(opens in a new tab) for narrative storytelling. Send space tips and story ideas to [email protected](opens in a new tab) or text 443-684-2489. Follow her on Twitter at @elishasauers(opens in a new tab)


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