Black Holes May Be Younger Than They Look



Super-massive black holes in the universe vary in mass from about one million to 10 billion times the size of our sun, and they're continuing to grow. Now

astronomers from Tel Aviv University say that the era of the "first fast growth" of these phenomena occurred a mere 1.2 billion years ago — only about half of what was previously believed — and that they

continue to grow at a very fast rate.



The new research from Prof. Hagai Hetzer and his student Benny Trakhtenbrot of Tel Aviv University is based on observations from some of the largest

ground-based telescopes in the world: "Gemini North" in Hawaii and the

"Very Large Telescope Array" in Chile. It's the culmination of a

seven-year-long project at Tel Aviv University designed to follow the

evolution of these black holes; the results will soon be published in

the Astrophysical Journal.



Full details at Tel Aviv University.

Alex
Tuesdays at The Satellite Diaries and Friday at The Daytime Astronomer (twitter @skyday)

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