HomeAstronomy2 merging supermassive black holes spotted in early universe

2 merging supermassive black holes spotted in early universe

This artist’s impression shows a closely bound duo of energetic quasars — the hallmark of a pair of merging galaxies — seen when the universe was only three billion years old. (Image credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani, J. da Silva)

Astronomers have spotted two quasars lighting up the mutual heart of colliding galaxies at a period in the universe’s early history dubbed “cosmic noon.” 

The energetic quasars, or active galactic nuclei (AGNs), are powered by feeding supermassive black holes and are seen as they were just three billion years after the Big Bang, during a period of intense galactic growth and star formation, a new study reports.

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