Skip to main content

See a map of 25,000 supermassive black holes in distant galaxies

Sky map showing 25,000 supermassive black holes. Each white dot is a supermassive black hole in its own galaxy.
Sky map showing 25,000 supermassive black holes. Each white dot is a supermassive black hole in its own galaxy. LOFAR/LOL Survey

It might look like a map of stars, but that’s not what is shown in the image above. Instead, each dot on this map of the night sky represents an enormous black hole called a supermassive black hole, each in a different distant galaxy.

Astronomers know that at the heart of almost every galaxy (including our own) lies a monstrous black hole with a mass millions of times the mass of the sun. Black holes suck in everything around them and are so dense that nothing — not even light — can escape from them. However, it is still possible to observe them by looking at radio emissions. That’s how the famous first image of a black hole was captured in 2019.

A group of astronomers at Leiden University in The Netherlands used radio emissions to map out all the black holes that can be seen in a portion of the northern sky. They combined 256 hours of observations of the sky to spot the black holes.

But their task was complicated due to a shell of charged particles that surrounds the Earth, called the ionosphere, which distorts the incoming signals. “It’s similar to when you try to see the world while immersed in a swimming pool,” co-author Reinout van Weeren explained in a statement. “When you look up, the waves on the water of the pool deflect the light rays and distort the view.”

To adjust for this distortion, they created algorithms that were run on supercomputers to correct the ionosphere effect every four seconds. That allowed them to create the map above, which represents 4% of the northern sky.

“This is the result of many years of work on incredibly difficult data,” research leader Francesco de Gasperin said. “We had to invent new methods to convert the radio signals into images of the sky.”

The team hopes to continue the mapping project to cover the entire northern sky. For now, they are happy to have these results to share, as Scientific Director of the Leiden Observatory and senior author Huub Röttgering said: “After many years of software development, it is so wonderful to see that this has now really worked out.”

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
Astronomers spot a monster black hole ‘practically in our backyard’
The cross-hairs mark the location of the newly discovered monster black hole.

Black holes come in a variety of sizes, from stellar black holes a few times the mass of the sun all the way up to supermassive black holes, which are millions of times the mass of the sun and lurk at the heart of galaxies. Recently, astronomers discovered a massive black hole just 1,550 light-years away, which is right in our neighborhood, astronomically speaking. It is one of the closest black holes ever discovered, with a mass 12 times that of the sun. Being so close to us, it's an exciting target for future research.

The cross-hairs mark the location of the newly discovered monster black hole. Sloan Digital Sky Survey / S. Chakrabart et al.

Read more
Something strange is up with this black hole
Artist’s illustration of tidal disruption event AT2019dsg where a supermassive black hole spaghettifies and gobbles down a star. Some of the material is not consumed by the black hole and is flung back out into space.

One of the first things that people learn about black holes is that they absorb everything which comes close to them, but this isn't exactly accurate. It is true that once anything passes the event horizon of a black hole it can never escape, but there is a significant area around the black hole where its gravitational effects are still extremely strong but things can still escape. In fact, black holes regularly give off dramatic jets of matter, which are typically thrown out when material falls into the black hole and a small amount is ejected outward at great speeds.

But astronomers recently discovered a totally mysterious phenomenon, where a black hole is ejecting material years after it ripped apart a star. The black hole AT2019dsg is located 665 million light-years away and was observed tearing apart the star in 2018, then for unknown reasons, it became extremely active again in 2021. “This caught us completely by surprise — no one has ever seen anything like this before,” said lead author Yvette Cendes, a research associate at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA).

Read more
There’s a bubble of hot gas zipping around our galaxy’s supermassive black hole
This is the first image of Sagittarius A* (or Sgr A* for short), the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy. It’s the first direct visual evidence of the presence of this black hole. It was captured by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing radio observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized” virtual telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizon”, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape.

At the center of our galaxy is an enormous black hole, surrounded by a swirl of glowing hot gas which forms a ring structure around the black hole itself. This structure was famously captured in the first-ever image of the supermassive black hole, named Sagittarius A*, which was released earlier this year. Now, scientists have discovered an oddity in this dramatic environment, detecting a bubble of hot gas which is orbiting around the black hole and its ring structure.

Sagittarius A* and animation of the hot spot around it

Read more