Distant black hole jet discovered in glow of Big Bang!

The jet, found in the system known as B3 0727+409, is at least 300,000 light years.  

Distant black hole jet discovered in glow of Big Bang!
Photo credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/ISAS/A. Simionescu et al, Optical: DSS

Washington: Astronomers, using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, have discovered a jet from a very distant supermassive black hole being illuminated by the oldest light in the Universe.

They detected a light which was emitted from the jet when the Universe was only 2.7 billion years old, a fifth of its present age. At this point, the intensity of the cosmic microwave background radiation, or CMB, left over from the Big Bang was much greater than it is today.

“Because we’re seeing this jet when the Universe was less than three billion years old, the jet is about 150 times brighter in X-rays than it would be in the nearby Universe,” said Aurora Simionescu at JAXA’s Institute of Space and Astronautical Studies (ISAS) who led the study.

The jet, found in the system known as B3 0727+409, is at least 300,000 light years.

As the electrons in the jet fly from the black hole at close to the speed of light, they move through the sea of CMB radiation and collide with microwave photons, boosting the energy of the photons up into the X-ray band to be detected by Chandra.

This implies that the electrons in the B3 0727+409 jet must keep moving at nearly the speed of light for hundreds of thousands of light years.

“We essentially stumbled onto this remarkable jet because it happened to be in Chandra’s field of view while we were observing something else,” explains co-author Lukasz Stawarz of Jagiellonian University in Poland.

They said the discovery of the jet in B3 0727+409 is special because so far almost no radio signal has been detected from this object, while it is easily seen in the X-ray image.

“Supermassive black hole activity, including the launching of jets, may be different in the early Universe than what we see later on,” said co-author Teddy Cheung of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington DC.

“By finding and studying more of these distant jets, we can start to grasp how the properties of supermassive black holes might change over billions of years.”

The discovery shows that black holes with powerful jets may be more common than previously thought in the first few billion years after the Big Bang.

The findings were published in the January issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters and appear online.

(Source: NASA)

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