Widdekind Posted May 11, 2009 Posted May 11, 2009 Computer Simulations suggest that: hundreds of medium-sized Black Holes are roaming loose in the Milky Way. These rogues... are the orphaned Central Black Holes of the many smaller Galaxies that the Milky Way has swallowed over its billions of years of existence. For: Galaxies, such as our own, most often grow by absorbing smaller, satellite galaxies, such as the Large Magellanic Cloud, which orbits the Milky Way. And: each of the hundreds of billions of Galaxies in the Cosmos formed a massive or supermassive Black Hole at its center [and] when big Galaxies collide -- a relatively common occurrence -- their central Black Holes eventually merge. But: sometimes the central Black Hole of a Dwarf Galaxy might remain independent after a Galactic Collision... The ejected Black Hole would not move fast enough to escape the Galaxy's gravity entirely, but it would move faster than the background stars--something that makes it detectable, because it would also be dragging along a small cluster of surrounding stars... the researchers suggest searching the galaxy for compact and relatively fast-moving clusters of old stars*. Now, "compact clusters of old stars" sounds suspiciously like Globular Clusters: supermassive Globular Clusters are in fact the cores of Dwarf Galaxies that are consumed by the larger Galaxies. Several Globular Clusters (like M15 [in our Milky Way Galaxy, 33.6 thousand light-years away, in Pegasus Constellation]) have extremely massive Cores which may harbor Black Holes... a 4,000 Solar-mass Intermediate-mass Black Hole has been suggested to exist, based on HST [Hubble Space Telescope] observations, in the Globular Cluster M15, and a 20,000 Solar-mass Black Hole in the Mayall II cluster in the Andromeda Galaxy. Both x-ray and radio emissions from Mayall II appear to be consistent with an intermediate-mass black hole. These are of particular interest because they are the first black holes discovered that were intermediate in mass between the conventional stellar-mass Black Hole and the supermassive Black Holes discovered at the cores of Galaxies. The mass of these Intermediate-mass Black Holes is proportional to the mass of the clusters, following a pattern previously discovered between Supermassive Black Holes and their surrounding Galaxies**. This strongly suggests, that Globular Clusters are ancient Dwarf Galaxies, having "Dwarf Black Holes" at their cores. * Running Amok in the Milky Way -- Berardelli 2009 (429): 2 -- ScienceNOW ** Globular cluster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airbrush Posted May 20, 2009 Posted May 20, 2009 Nice info Widdekind, thanks for sharing. I understood you 100% this time. Let's be on the lookout for an entourage of stars following a medium massive black hole thru our galaxy. How do you think supermassive black holes originally formed? I seems to me they must have formed at the time of the big bang because how does that much matter, Millions or Billions of solar masses, get close enough together to create a SBH? Stars are too disbursed and have too much motion to all fall together like that.
granpa Posted May 20, 2009 Posted May 20, 2009 I read somewhere that gas falling into the center of the galaxy would form a gas disk and would have to lose 99.9% of its angular momentum before it could even get close to the black hole.
Airbrush Posted May 21, 2009 Posted May 21, 2009 That is what I mean granpa, there was too much angular momentum, and low density so very little gravity in the swirling expanding masses of gas and dust, for it to all just fall into the middle and become a SBH. The original eddys in the early big bang became SBHs.
Widdekind Posted May 24, 2009 Author Posted May 24, 2009 Perhaps the Big Bang was the Explosive Evaporation of a "Hyper-Massive Black Hole": http://www.scienceforums.net/forum/showthread.php?t=39313 Perhaps your SMBHs are "chunks" of BH material blown outwards by that explosion, akin to knots of gas blown out by Supernovae. Those "BH fragments" then formed the seeds of Galaxies w/in our Universe -- to wit, inside the expanding "Explosion Remnant" (akin to Supernova Remnants).
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