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Monday, May 18, 2015

Four Quasars in a row

Quasars occur when the black hole of a young galaxy consumes large quantities of gas and dust. During this active stage of the black hole the material is superheated and large jets can be emitted by the black hole. It’s thought that most, if not all, galaxies enter such a stage in their youth, but this intense active period is short-lived on a cosmic scale. So it’s unusual to see several quasars clustered together. But now we’ve found a rare quartet of quasars, and it’s raising a few eyebrows.

The discovery was presented in the latest issue of Science, which finds four quasars in a single large nebula. The nebula is about a million light years across and has a mass of about 100 billion Suns, which is surprisingly large. But the presence of four active galactic nuclei is highly unusual. Quasars make up a relatively small fraction of galaxies, so the odds of four of them being so closely packed purely by chance is about 1 in 10 million. This would seem to imply that they have some kind of common origin, but it’s unclear what that might be. The usual computer simulations don’t predict this kind of close quasar alignment.