Topic

Supermassive Black Holes

Episodes and research papers from From First Principles that help explain Supermassive Black Holes from the ground up.

Research

Papers and studies featured by the show.

Nature·

Little red dots as young supermassive black holes in dense ionized cocoons

Imagine you see a blurry, red light in a thick fog. You might guess it's a giant bonfire. But what if it's actually a much smaller, intensely bright spotlight, and the fog is just scattering its light, making it look bigger and fuzzier? Scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope found these 'little red dots' in the early universe. At first, they looked like evidence for already-massive black holes. This study proposes they are actually smaller, 'toddler' black holes furiously eating gas inside a super-dense cocoon of cosmic fog. This fog not only makes their light look 'blurry' but also hides them from X-ray and radio telescopes, explaining why they've been so hard to find until now.

Science News

M87's black hole flipped its magnetic field

Imagine a bar magnet with a north and south pole. Now imagine that magnet suddenly flipping so north becomes south and vice versa. That's essentially what happened with the magnetic field around the giant black hole at the center of galaxy M87 — except this black hole is 6.5 billion times heavier than our Sun. Scientists noticed this flip by watching the powerful beam of energy, called a jet, that shoots out from the black hole. The direction and behavior of that beam changed in a way that revealed the magnetic field had reversed. It's a big deal because those magnetic fields are thought to act like the engine that powers and steers these cosmic jets, and we've rarely caught one flipping in action.