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'Dark Gulping' Could Explain Black
Holes
No, it's not the next soft-drink campaign. "Dark gulping" is a new hypothesis about how giant black
holes might have formed from collapsing dark matter.
Supermassive black holesare a mystery. These behemoths can pack the mass of billions of suns, and
often lurk in the centers of big galaxieslike the Milky Way. But scientists don't know how they got
started nor how they grew so massive.
A new computer model suggests dark gulping is one possible route to forming these monsters. Theidea involves invisible dark matter, which is stuff of unknown nature that astronomers know exists
because they see its gravitational effects on galaxies.q
In this scenario, a large cloud of dark matter could interact with gas to form a dense central mass.
Depending on how the dark matter stores heat, this mass could be unstable. A small disturbance
might prompt the dark matter to collapse quickly, gulping itself down to create a black hole. Though
it wouldoriginally be invisible, soon it would gobble down regular matter and gas and, with all that
material swirling in and being superheated and luminous, become visible.
This hypothesis seems plausible, but there is no proof yet that it ever happened, said Kinwah Wu, an
astrophysicist at University College London's Mullard Space Science Laboratory, who built themodel with colleague Curtis Saxton.
"It's a viable, possible scenario," Wu told SPACE.com. "The model works, but it doesn't mean that
nature behaves like that. We need more observational proof or disproof of this."
Saxton will present the findings this week at the European Week of Astronomy and Space Science at
the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield, England.
Black holes can't be seen because once light and matter get inside one, they are trapped. But on the
way in, all the material creates a chaotic mess of radiation that does escape into space. From
observations offar-away quasars
bright objects thought to be anchored by black holes andsurrounded by intense star formation scientists think that supermassive black holes existed when
the universe was less than a billion years old. Yet most theories about these gigantors can't explain
how they formed so early.
For example, many experts have suggested that supermassive black holes are the result of smaller
black holes merging. But that process would likely have taken too long to account for their
appearance when the universe was so young.
Dark gulping is appealing because it would happen very quickly, Wu said. Black holes born this way
would simply be born huge, and wouldn't have to accrete the matter slowly over time. Ongoing
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studies attempting to figure out what dark matter is made of and how it is spread around the universe
could help prove or disprove dark gulping.