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For the first time, NASA Chandra X-ray telescope has been used to discover a pair of black holes in dwarf galaxies that are on a collision course. The Chandra team explains.

Credit: NASA/CXC/A. Hobart
Transcript
00:00Visit Chandra's Beautiful Universe
00:04Dwarf Galaxies
00:08Astronomers have discovered the first evidence
00:12for giant black holes in dwarf galaxies on a collision course.
00:16This result from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory has important
00:20ramifications for understanding how the first wave of black holes in galaxies
00:24grew in the early universe. Collisions between the pairs
00:28of dwarf galaxies have pulled gas toward the giant black holes they each
00:32contain, causing the black holes to grow. Eventually
00:36the likely collision of the black holes will cause them to merge into
00:40much larger black holes. The pairs of galaxies will also
00:44merge into one. Scientists think the
00:48universe was awash with small galaxies known as dwarf galaxies
00:52several hundred million years after the Big Bang. Most
00:56merged with others in the crowded smaller
00:58volume of the early universe
01:00setting in motion the building of larger and
01:02larger galaxies now seen
01:04around the local universe.
01:06Dwarf galaxies
01:08by definition contain stars
01:10with a total mass less than about
01:123 billion times that of the Sun
01:14compared to a total mass
01:16of about 60 billion suns estimated
01:18for the Milky Way.
01:20The earliest dwarf galaxies are impossible to observe
01:24with current technology because they are extraordinarily faint at their large distances.
01:30Astronomers have been able to observe
01:32two in the process of merging at much closer distances to Earth
01:36but without signs of black holes in both galaxies.
01:40Astronomers have found many examples of black holes on collision courses
01:44in large galaxies that are relatively close by.
01:46But searches for them in dwarf galaxies are much more challenging
01:50and until now had failed.
01:52The new study overcame these challenges by implementing
01:56a systematic survey of deep Chandra X-ray observations
02:00and comparing them with infrared data
02:02from NASA's Wide Infrared Survey Explorer
02:04or WISE Telescope
02:06and optical data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope.
02:10Using this technique,
02:12a group of researchers identified
02:14two pairs of merging dwarf galaxies
02:16in separate galaxy clusters.
02:18The first
02:20is ABEL 133
02:22which is located about
02:24760 million light-years away.
02:26The second
02:28is the galaxy cluster ABEL 1758S
02:30which is about
02:323.2 billion light-years from Earth.
02:34Astronomers will use these systems as analogues
02:38for ones in the early Universe
02:40so they can drill down into questions
02:42about the first galaxies,
02:44their black holes,
02:46and star formation the collisions caused
02:48many billions of years ago.
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