Something fundamental about black holes may be changing
New observations reveal that the relationship between ultraviolet and X-ray light in quasars has changed over billions of years. This unexpected shift suggests the structure around supermassive black holes may evolve with time, challenging a decades-old assumption.
An international group of astronomers has uncovered strong evidence suggesting that the material surrounding supermassive black holes has not remained the same throughout the history of the universe. The findings indicate that the structure and behavior of this matter may have shifted over billions of years.
Led by researchers at the National Observatory of Athens, the study was published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. If confirmed, the results would challenge a foundational idea in astronomy that has guided research for nearly 50 years.
What Makes Quasars So Bright
Quasars, first identified in the 1960s, rank among the most luminous objects known. They shine so intensely because they are powered by supermassive black holes pulling in surrounding matter. As this material spirals inward under immense gravity, it forms a rotating, disk-shaped structure before falling into the black hole.
Friction within this disk heats the matter to extreme temperatures. As a result, it can emit 100 to 1,000 times more light than an entire galaxy made up of about 100 billion stars. This overwhelming brightness allows quasars to outshine their host galaxies and makes them visible to telescopes across vast cosmic distances.
From Ultraviolet Light to Powerful X-Rays
The glowing disk around a black hole produces enormous amounts of ultraviolet light. Scientists believe this light plays a key role in generating the even more energetic X-rays emitted by quasars. As ultraviolet rays travel outward, they pass through clouds of highly energized particles located very close to the black hole, a region known as the "corona."
When ultraviolet light interacts with these particles, it gains energy and transforms into intense X-ray radiation. These X-rays can then be detected by space-based observatories.
A Long-Standing Cosmic Relationship Under Question
Because both types of light originate near the same black hole, astronomers have long known that ultraviolet and X-ray emissions from quasars are closely linked. Typically, brighter ultraviolet light goes hand in hand with stronger X-ray output. This relationship, identified almost five decades ago, has offered critical clues about the physical conditions near supermassive black holes.
The new study challenges the assumption that this connection is universal. That assumption suggests that the structure of matter around black holes is essentially the same everywhere and at all times in the universe.
Instead, the researchers found that when the universe was younger (about half its present age), the relationship between ultraviolet and X-ray light looked noticeably different from what astronomers see in nearby quasars today. This points to changes in how the accretion disk and corona interact over roughly the last 6.5 billions of years.