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Supermassive Diet: Black Holes Bulk-Up On Dark Matter 102

astroengine writes It has long been assumed that the size of a supermassive black hole in a galaxy's core is intimately related to the number of stars that galaxy contains — but it might not be that simple after all. According to new research, it may in fact be a galaxy's extensive dark matter halo that controls the evolution of the central supermassive black hole and not the total number of stars that galaxy contains. "There seems to be a mysterious link between the amount of dark matter a galaxy holds and the size of its central black hole, even though the two operate on vastly different scales," said lead author Akos Bogdan of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), Cambridge, Mass.
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Supermassive Diet: Black Holes Bulk-Up On Dark Matter

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  • by master_kaos ( 1027308 ) on Wednesday February 18, 2015 @04:44PM (#49082075)

    After switching my diet, my blackhole no longer bulks up my dark matter.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday February 18, 2015 @04:48PM (#49082097)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Could it be that the black holes are turning dark matter into matter? Or maybe it is the opposite and the black holes are converting matter into dark matter. So what happens when both matter and dark matter are squeezed into a singularity? Maybe dark matter terminates the life of a black hole at a certain point.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Actually, it's an acronym but anyway...
     
    MoND

  • I tried a supermassive diet, but it didn't work out so well. Turns out metabolism doesn't work that way.
  • It has long been assumed that the size of a supermassive black hole in a galaxy's core is intimately related to the number of stars that galaxy contains

    Not by me!

  • by MTEK ( 2826397 ) on Wednesday February 18, 2015 @06:09PM (#49082603)

    Could it be that when energy/matter is ingested by a black hole it gets squeezed beyond the plank scale and into a dimension that is different than the space-time dimension we perceive; a dimension unconstrained by the black hole's gravity well -- effectively allowing the consumed energy/matter to exhaust back out into the galaxy as a different form?

    • So you're saying there's possibly no such thing as a supermassive black hole, since mass falling into it gets spread out on a galactic scale in some mysterious way?

      • by MTEK ( 2826397 )

        I'm thinking more of a dimension (brane) that underpins the fabric of space; one whose shape can change independently of the presence of ordinary matter/gravity in our dimension. Only a black hole would be capable of exerting an effect.

  • by Skarjak ( 3492305 ) on Wednesday February 18, 2015 @11:18PM (#49084391)

    Why is it that people who have spent 30 seconds thinking about the problem think they know better than significantly more intelligent people who have spent decades? Especially when the (very large and convincing) amount of evidence for dark matter is easily accessible through a bit of googling. Guys, dark matter isn't just scientists throwing their arms in the air. It just works. Models with dark matter work much better than models without. And we've made multiple observations of things that point to dark matter existing. And no, it can't be black holes or brown dwarfs. That's been thought of a long time ago and it doesn't work. If you have a better idea and years of papers to support it, by all means, you can trash talk dark matter. Otherwise, please don't spread your ignorance. Science is not a democracy, and your opinion doesn't matter if it's unsupported.

    • Because it's the new "phogiston" or the new "ether". It solves certain observational issues, but requires an enormous leap of mathematical and physical faith to assume that it has all the necessary characteristics.

      Many of the models that "work better with dark matter" neglect the existence of matter that is not emitting light, but is nevertheless normal matter. Given the observational difficulties for objects and structures billions of light years away and billions of light years old, it's presumptive in th

      • What do you have against neutrinos? (Neutrinos have a lot of the characteristics of dark matter.) Why don't you consider gravitational effects to be observational? Who cares about stuff billions of light years away when trying to explain the rotation of nearby galaxies?

      • by Skarjak ( 3492305 ) on Thursday February 19, 2015 @06:34PM (#49091459)

        It's not a big leap actually. Dark matter might even be neutrinos, although I'm not entirely up to date on that area of research. We just need a particle that interacts gravitationally and perhaps weakly with baryonic matter (that's the part that most people miss, a weak interaction is allowed). We already know stuff that does that. We just aren't sure there's enough of it, so we're searching for other particles that might fit the bill. Dark matter really doesn't have to be that exotic.

        And I assure you that the observational evidence for dark matter is anything but subtle. Galaxy rotation curves are a quite spectacular way to show this effect at work, as I explained above. We also have the famous bullet cluster, a merger between clusters of galaxies where gravitational lensing shows a large amount of mass is found in the non-luminous parts. Another dramatic demonstration. Anyone telling you that the effects which justify the existence of dark matter are "subtle" is not being very thruthful. I mean, there's nothing subtle about galaxies smashing into each other...

        So in short, dark matter doesn't have to be all that exotic and the evidence for it is quite easy to observe. So what's the big deal? Why do peole dislike it so much? people bring up the ether example, but they tend to forget about all the other particles we predicted and then later discovered...

    • Why is it that

      Self-selected readership who, at one point in their lives, were probably complimented and/or tormented for being intelligent, thus making it a component of their personality.

      Preconceived notions which survive evidential disproving, making it easy to discard any summary based on the headline, or any article based on the summary.

      Also, a rotating vocal minority who read a few words and immediately have to type their thoughts, because no one could possibly understand the topic more than them - as

      • I will say this though: I love that this website allows you to call people out on their idiocy and you actually get positive moderation for this. Not sure that it's actually good in the grand scheme of things, but it's kind of therapeutic. :p
  • Remember we learned today that dark matter is information and when a tree falls in the forest it DOES make a sound.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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