Photo courtesy of M Kornmesser/ESOLife & Culture / NewsLife & Culture / NewsScientists have discovered the hungriest hole in the universeThe newly-discovered celestial object is the brightest and hungriest discovered to dateShareLink copied ✔️February 21, 2024February 21, 2024Text Thom Waite Earlier this week (February 19) scientists unveiled the brightest known object in the universe: a quasar, AKA the blazing core of a distant galaxy, powered by a black hole billions of times more massive than our sun. If you’re struggling to imagine something that big, then don’t worry – objects on this kind of scale are pretty much impossible for the human mind to comprehend. To put it into some perspective, though, the black hole is estimated to be ‘eating’ a mass equivalent to our sun every single Earth day, making it the hungriest hole around. Catchily known as J0529-4351, the object was previously recorded back in 1980, but was initially dismissed as too bright to be a distant quasar. The recent rediscovery comes courtesy of observations by Chile’s Very Large Telescope (not to be confused with the Extremely Large Telescope) which brought its true nature to light. In a paper published by Nature Astronomy, scientists confirm that the object is not, in fact, a star in the Milky Way (which would have explained its relatively bright appearance for Earth-based observers) but an incredibly bright object much further away. So far away, in fact, that the light it emits has taken 12 billion years to reach the Very Large Telescope’s detectors. How does a black hole give off light? Well technically, it doesn’t. This means that a black hole is impossible to observe in isolation. However, as its gravitational pull sucks in matter from the rest of the universe, that matter is pulled apart, and this releases a huge amount of light. Taken as a whole, this process forms what’s known as a “quasar”. By identifying and measuring the light from quasars, astronomers can make assumptions about the invisible objects that power them. According to scientists’ estimates, J0529-4351 is around 17 billion times the mass of our sun, and the disc of light around it measures seven light-years in diameter (making it the largest in the known universe). However, it’s the black hole’s unique hunger – again, it digests a sun-sized mass every day – that makes it particularly luminous, with a brightness described as equivalent to more than 500 trillion suns. The existence of celestial objects like J0529-4351 is still a tough puzzle to crack, but it’s a potentially important one if we want to unlock the mysteries of how the universe (and, by extension, life on Earth) came into existence. After all, it’s been speculated that every galaxy has a similar supermassive object at its core, including the Milky Way’s very own black hole, Sagittarius A*. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingThis film gives looksmaxxing men the body horror treatmentActor Sunny Suljic and director Elan Alexander discuss their new film Looksmaxxing, uncanny SFX, and trying to understand what makes influencers like Clavicular tickBeautyDazed LeagueInside Dazed League, a tribute to soccer in North AmericaDazed LeagueA brief history of Nike’s radical soccer DNABeauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaMusicConfessions II: 7 raw and vulnerable easter eggs on Madonna’s new album MusicMadonna is still the bad girl of feminismLife & CultureSprinkle sprinkle: why hypergamy is trending on TikTokBeautyThe sexiest flesh-baring Instagram accounts you need to followLife & CultureUnpacking the chaotic astrology of America’s 250th anniversaryEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy