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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

About a Third of Supermassive Black Holes are Hiding
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About a Third of Supermassive Black Holes are Hiding

Supermassive black holes can have trillions of times more mass than the Sun, only exist in specific locations, and could number in the trillions. How can objects like that be hiding? They’re shielded from our view by thick columns of gas and dust. However, astronomers are developing a way to find them: by looking for donuts that glow in the infrared. It seems almost certain that large galaxies like our own Milky Way host supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in their centers. They grow through mergers with other SMBHs and through accretion. When they’re actively accreting material, they’re called Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) and become so bright they can outshine all of the stars in their entire galaxy. The most luminous AGN are called quasars. SMBHs, like all black holes, emit no light themselves. Instead, the light comes from the torus of swirling gas and dust that forms an accretion ring around the SMBH. The gas and dust become superheated and emit electromagnetic radiation. So far, scientists have only imaged two SMBHs, both with the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). (To be clear, the EHT doesn’t actually “see” the SMBH. Instead, it sees the light coming from the accretion disk and the shadow the SMBH casts on the disk.) The first ever actual image of a black hole was taken in 2019. This shows the black hole at the heart of galaxy M87. Image Credit: Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration Even without seeing them, astronomers are pretty certain that most large galaxies host an SMBH. How? Stars near the center of galaxies move in unusual ways as if they’re under the influence of an extremely massive object. The intense radiation from AGN is also strong evidence of an SMBH. Galaxy formation and evolution models and gravitational lensing provide additional evidence. However, astronomers still want to find more of them so they can confirm their models or adapt them to suit observational results. The problem is that many of them are hidden from view by gas and dust. If that gas and dust are thick and dense enough, they act as a veil, blocking even low-energy X-ray light. That means our view of the galaxy centre is obscured, even if it is an AGN. Whether or not we can see the centre of a galaxy like this depends on our viewing. From a “side” view, the torus blocks it out, while from a “top” or “bottom” view, it doesn’t. Astronomers want to understand how many SMBHs there are in the Universe, but obviously, there’s no way to find them and count them all. What they hope to do is determine the ratio between hidden and unhidden SMBHs. To do that, they need a large enough sample to extrapolate from. That way, they can get a more accurate idea of how many SMBHs there are. A new survey using data from multiple NASA telescopes has advanced our understanding of SMBHs. The survey and its results are detailed in a paper titled “The NuSTAR Local AGN NH Distribution Survey (NuLANDS). I. Toward a Truly Representative Column Density Distribution in the Local Universe.” It’s published in The Astrophysical Journal, and the lead author is Peter G. Boorman, an astrophysicist from the Cahill Center for Astrophysics at the California Institute of Technology. The NuLANDS aims to find the thick dust and gas that obscures AGN. Previous efforts to detect AGN have been hampered by relying on hard X-rays, the highest-energy portion of the X-ray spectrum, often defined as X-rays with energies greater than 10 kiloelectronvolts (keV). Accretion disks around SMBHs can be heated to extremely high temperatures and emit hard X-rays. However, thick enough gas and dust can block even hard X-rays. If the column density of the gas is too high, no hard X-rays can get through. “Hard X-ray-selected samples of active galactic nuclei (AGN) provide one of the cleanest views of supermassive black hole accretion but are biased against objects obscured by Compton-thick gas column densities of NH > 1024 cm-2,” the authors write in their paper. Compton-thick means thick enough to obscure an AGN. The thick gas and dust that block hard X-rays absorb them and then re-emit them as lower-energy infrared light. This creates a glowing torus, or donut, of gas and dust. This is where IRAS comes in. IRAS was the Infrared Astronomical Satellite, launched in January 1983 and operated for 10 months. It performed an infrared survey of the entire sky, and it spotted the infrared emissions from the toruses around SMBHs. Critically, it spotted these toruses whether they were face-on or edge-on. However, IRAS didn’t discriminate against infrared sources. It also spotted galaxies undergoing rapid star formation, which emit similar infrared light as AGN. In this new research, the authors used ground-based telescopes to differentiate between the two. At that stage, the researchers had a sample of toruses around SMBHs emitting infrared light. However, they didn’t know if they were seeing them face-on or edge-on. Remember, their goal was to determine how many SMBHs are hidden and how many aren’t. With a large enough sample containing good data, they could extrapolate how many SMBHs there are and whether all large galaxies have one. This is where another NASA satellite comes in. NuSTAR is an X-ray space telescope that was launched in June 2012 and is still operating. One of its primary goals was to detect SMBHs one billion times more massive than the Sun. An artist’s illustration of NASA’s NuSTAR X-ray satellite. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech NuSTAR can detect high-energy X-rays that pass through thick dust and gas, so it can detect edge-on SMBHs. However, it can use hours of observation time to detect these X-rays, so for it to be effective, it has to know where to look first. That’s what IRAS helped with. “It amazes me how useful IRAS and NuSTAR were for this project, especially despite IRAS being operational over 40 years ago,” said lead author Boorman. “I think it shows the legacy value of telescope archives and the benefit of using multiple instruments and wavelengths of light together.” In their NuLANDS survey, the researchers looked at 122 nearby AGN chosen for their warm infrared colours. “To tackle this issue, we present the NuSTAR Local AGN NH Distribution Survey (NuLANDS)—a legacy sample of 122 nearby (z < 0.044) AGN primarily selected to have warm infrared colors from IRAS between 25 and 60 ?m,” the authors write. Their sample of galaxies is also biased towards those whose AGN is obscured by something close to them rather than by some large-scale feature of the galaxy itself. “By construction, our sample will miss sources affected by severe narrow-line reddening, and thus segregates sources dominated by small-scale nuclear obscuration from large-scale host-galaxy obscuration,” the authors explain. The researchers found that 35% ± 9% of galaxies have Compton-thick dust, meaning their AGN and SMBH are obscured. So, about one-third of the Universe’s SMBHs are obscured. However, these are only the first results from NuLANDS, and while 122 AGN is a sizeable survey, there’s more to come. These results support some of the thinking around SMBHs, their masses, and their numbers. SMBHs must consume an enormous amount of material to reach their enormous sizes. That means many of them should be obscured by the very dust they’ll eventually consume. Boorman and his co-authors say their results support this idea. “If we didn’t have black holes, galaxies would be much larger,” said study co-author Poshak Gandhi, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Southampton in the UK. That’s for two reasons. First, they consume material that would otherwise form more stars. Second, sometimes too much material falls toward the black hole, and they belch up the excess. That ejected material can disperse the clouds of gas where stars form, slowing the galaxy’s star formation. “So if we didn’t have a supermassive black hole in our Milky Way galaxy, there might be many more stars in the sky. That’s just one example of how black holes can influence a galaxy’s evolution,” said Gandhi. The post About a Third of Supermassive Black Holes are Hiding appeared first on Universe Today.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Nanoparticles Reverse Parkinson's in Mice by Healing Damaged Dopamine Cells
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Nanoparticles Reverse Parkinson's in Mice by Healing Damaged Dopamine Cells

This is the future.
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Country Roundup
Country Roundup
1 y

The Avett Brothers Honor Country Music Icon Toby Keith With “As Good As I Once Was” On ‘Austin City Limits’
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The Avett Brothers Honor Country Music Icon Toby Keith With “As Good As I Once Was” On ‘Austin City Limits’

The Avett Brothers have great taste when it comes to selecting cover songs. The folk rock band made up of brothers Scott and Seth Avett (hence the name of the group) have had a number of hits, including "Ain't No Man" and "Head Full of Doubt/Road Full of Promise." They tend to stay in the folk sound, but like many other folk groups, they can sometimes ride the line between their own genre and country. And when the Avett Brothers decide to jump into country music, they can certainly handle it. That's been proven true when the brothers cue up a country cover at their concerts. Their go-to, as of late, has been Toby Keith's "As Good as I Once Was." They performed the song at Red Rocks last year, and also went to it when they were a part of the "Concert For Carolina" benefit concert back in October. The Avett Brothers are from Concord, North Carolina, so it only made sense for them to join in when Eric Church and Luke Combs put together the all-hands-on-deck event that raised over $24.5 million for Hurricane Helene relief. Toby Keith’s “As Good as I Once Was" is considered to be a timeless classic of his. The late, great country artist released it in 2005 as the second single from his Honkytonk University album. The Big Dog Daddy wrote it with Scotty Emerick, and the song peaked at #1 on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, staying at the top for six weeks. It even tied with his 2003 single “Beer for My Horses” for his longest-running number one single. All that to say that it's a hell of a song, and it perfectly encapsulates the sing-song storytelling that Toby Keith mastered during his legendary music career. Some artists might find it intimidating to cover, but Scott and Seth Avett seem rather comfortable with the lyrics and nuances of the track. And I don't think it's a stretch to say that they sounded damn good when they brought the song to their Austin City Limits setlist. Their full ACL concert is set to air on January 18, but the program's YouTube account decided to share the Avett Brothers' tribute to Toby Keith a little early. You can view it below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buQ-i3dkOyw Pretty solid, right? It's so good, in fact, that it makes me want to flip back and forth between their cover and Toby's original version for the next couple of hours (why not right?). You can join me in doing so if you want to, especially since Keith's music video for "As Good As I Once Was" is an all-timer. Toby sure had a way with making iconic music videos. The video follows the exact, comical story that the lyrics of the song throws out, including Toby running into twin sisters at a bar, and the Big Dog Daddy getting into a massive bar fight only because someone spilled a little bit of his beer. It's Toby Keith at his best, or at the very least, as good as he once was. "As Good As I Once Was" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldQrapQ4d0Y
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Cabinet picks know what to expect from Trump: Rep. Byron Donalds | National Report
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Cabinet picks know what to expect from Trump: Rep. Byron Donalds | National Report

Cabinet picks know what to expect from Trump: Rep. Byron Donalds | National ReportFollow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos:https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

'Theatrical performance': AOC torched for 'disheartening' House floor tirade
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'Theatrical performance': AOC torched for 'disheartening' House floor tirade

'Theatrical performance': AOC torched for 'disheartening' House floor tiradeFollow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos:https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Biden had 'schizophrenic' approach to foreign policy: Mike Huckabee | Wake Up America
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Biden had 'schizophrenic' approach to foreign policy: Mike Huckabee | Wake Up America

Biden had 'schizophrenic' approach to foreign policy: Mike Huckabee | Wake Up AmericaFollow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos:https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Dems launched 'desperate' questions at Hegseth: Sen. Kevin Cramer | Wake Up America
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Dems launched 'desperate' questions at Hegseth: Sen. Kevin Cramer | Wake Up America

Dems launched 'desperate' questions at Hegseth: Sen. Kevin Cramer | Wake Up AmericaFollow NewsClips channel at Brighteon.com for more updatesSubscribe to Brighteon newsletter to get the latest news and more featured videos:https://support.brighteon.com/Subscribe.html
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Rubio Confirmation Hearing Centers on China
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Rubio Confirmation Hearing Centers on China

Senate confirmation hearings for Marco Rubio, President-elect Trump’s nominee for secretary of state, began Wednesday. The hearings were initially marred by protestors objecting to Rubio’s support for sanctions on Latin American governments hostile to American interests including Cuba and Venezuela. The interests and position of the United States with regard to China was one of the major topics of the hearing. When asked by Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-NE) if he agreed that China is the biggest national security threat to the U.S., Rubio replied that he agreed “100 percent” and asserted that “the Chinese believe the U.S. are a great power in inevitable decline, and they are on an inevitable rise… The danger is, because of our own actions, a dangerous imbalance has built up in that relationship.” Rubio emphasized that a great power competition with China has serious potential consequences for the U.S. domestically because of the country’s technical and industrial capacity. “If we stay on the road we are on right now,” he said, “in less than 10 years, virtually everything that matters to us in life will depend on whether China allows us to have it or not.” Secretary of State nominee Marco Rubio:"If we stay on the road we are on right now – in less than 10 years, virtually everything that matters to us in life will depend on whether China allows us to have it or not."pic.twitter.com/JnVoEQQn3m— The American Conservative (@amconmag) January 15, 2025 Rubio was also questioned on his position on American aid to Ukraine. When Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) asked him how his views on Ukraine have developed, Rubio noted that the conflict has become a war of attrition that will prevent both Russia from conquering the country and prevent Ukraine from pushing the Russians from their claimed territory. As such, Rubio said, he agreed with President-elect Trump’s assertion that “the killing must stop.” “This war has to end,” he said, “and I think it should be the official policy of the United States that we want to see it end.” Marco Rubio says it was a "dangerous delusion" to believe "that all mankind was destined to abandon national sovereignty and national identity" to "instead become…citizens of the world.""The postwar global order is not just obsolete—it is now a weapon being used against us." pic.twitter.com/McsoonQdT2— Nate Hochman (@njhochman) January 15, 2025 Rubio also issued a sharp rebuke to the post–Cold War American foreign policy establishment: Out of the triumphalism out of the end of the long Cold War emerged a bipartisan consensus… that we had reached the end of history; that all of the nations of the world would now become members of the democratic, Western-led community; that a foreign policy that served the national interest could now be replaced by one that served the liberal world order; and that all mankind was now destined to abandon national sovereignty and national identity and become citizens of the world… We now know this was a dangerous delusion… The postwar global order is not just obsolete—it is now a weapon being used against us. The post Rubio Confirmation Hearing Centers on China appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Clips and Trailers
Clips and Trailers
1 y ·Youtube Cool & Interesting

YouTube
Bourne’s Intense Bike Chase in Morocco | The Bourne Ultimatum
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
Logos Academy Episode 29: Mein Kampf
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