At the heart of most, if not all, large galaxies1 lurks2(潜伏) a supermassive black hole with a mass millions, or sometimes billions, times greater than that of the Sun. In many galaxies, including our own Milky3 Way, the central black hole is quiet. But in some galaxies, particularly early on in the history of the Universe, the central monster feasts on material that gives off intense radiation as it falls into the black hole. One unsolved mystery is where the material comes from to activate4 a sleeping black hole and trigger violent outbursts(爆发,破裂) at a galaxy5's centre, so that it then becomes an active galactic nucleus6. Up to now, many astronomers7 thought that most of these active nuclei8 were turned on when two galaxies merge9 or when they pass close to each other and the disrupted material becomes fuel for the central black hole. However, new results indicate that this idea may be wrong for many active galaxies.
Viola Allevato (Max-Planck-Institut fur Plasmaphysik; Excellence10 Cluster Universe, Garching, Germany) and an international team of scientists from the COSMOS11 collaboration12 have now looked in detail at more than 600 of these active galaxies in an extensively studied patch of the sky called the COSMOS field. As expected, the astronomers found that extremely brilliant(灿烂的) active nuclei were rare, while the bulk of the active galaxies in the past 11 billion years were only moderately bright. But there was a surprise; the new data showed that the majority of these more common, less bright active galaxies, even looking back far into the past, were not triggered by mergers14 between galaxies. The results will appear in The Astrophysical Journal.
The presence of active galactic nuclei is revealed by the X-rays emitted from around the black hole, which were picked up by ESA's XMM-Newton space observatory15. These galaxies were subsequently observed using ESO's Very Large Telescope, which was able to measure the distances to the galaxies. When combined, the observations allowed the team to make a three-dimensional map showing where the active galaxies lie.
"It took more than five years, but we were able to provide one of the largest and most complete inventories16 of active galaxies in the X-ray sky," said Marcella Brusa, one of the authors of the study.
The astronomers could use this new map to find out how the active galaxies were distributed and compare this with predictions from theory. They could also see how the distribution changed as the Universe aged17 — all the way from about 11 billion years ago to almost the present day.
The team found that active nuclei are mostly found in large massive galaxies with lots of dark matter. This was a surprise and not consistent with the prediction from theory — if most active nuclei were a consequence of mergers and collisions between galaxies it had been expected that they would be found in galaxies with moderate mass (about a trillion times the mass of the Sun). The team found that most active nuclei reside in(存在于) galaxies with masses about 20 times larger than the value predicted by merger13 theory.
"These new results give us a new insight into how supermassive black holes start their meals," said Viola Allevato, who is lead author on the new paper. "They indicate that black holes are usually fed by processes within the galaxy itself, such as disc instabilities and starbursts, as opposed to galaxy collisions."
Alexis Finoguenov, who supervised the work, concludes: "Even in the distant past, up to almost 11 billion years ago, galaxy collisions can only account for a small percentage of the moderately bright active galaxies. At that time galaxies were closer together so mergers were expected to be more frequent than in the more recent past, so the new results are all the more surprising."