Fat doughnut-shaped dust
shrouds that obscure about half of supermassive black holes could be the result
of high speed crashes between planets and asteroids, according to a new theory
from an international team of astronomers.
The
scientists, led by Dr. Sergei Nayakshin of the University of Leicester , are publishing their
results in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Supermassive black holes reside in the central
parts of most galaxies. Observations indicate that about 50% of them are hidden
from view by mysterious clouds of dust, the origin of which is not completely
understood. The new theory is inspired by our own Solar System, where the
so-called zodiacal dust is known to originate from collisions between solid
bodies such as asteroids and comets. The scientists propose that the central
regions of galaxies contain not only black holes and stars but also planets and
asteroids.
Collisions between these rocky objects would
occur at colossal speeds as large as 1000 km per second, continuously
shattering and fragmenting the objects, until eventually they end up as
microscopic dust. Dr. Nayakshin points out that this harsh environment --
radiation and frequent collisions -- would make the planets orbiting
supermassive black holes sterile, even before they are destroyed. "Too bad
for life on these planets," he says, "but on the other hand the dust
created in this way blocks much of the harmful radiation from reaching the rest
of the host galaxy. This in turn may make it easier for life to prosper
elsewhere in the rest of the central region of the galaxy."
He also believes that understanding the origin
of the dust near black holes is important in our models of how these monsters
grow and how exactly they affect their host galaxies. "We suspect that the
supermassive black hole in our own Galaxy, the Milky Way, expelled most of the
gas that would otherwise turn into more stars and planets," he continues,
"Understanding the origin of the dust in the inner regions of galaxies
would take us one step closer to solving the mystery of the supermassive black
holes."

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