Blackholes Align in ‘Spooky’ Way, Showing Great Order of Universe
This artist’s impression shows schematically the mysterious alignments between the spin axes of quasars and the large-scale structures that they inhabit that observations with ESO’s Very Large Telescope have revealed. These alignments are over billions of light-years and are the largest known in the Universe. (ESO/M. Kornmesser)
When astronomers look at the universe on a grand scale—when they step back to view the arrangement of galaxies on a scale of billions of light-years—they see that galaxies are aligned in a web formation.
New observations with the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO’s) Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile have revealed that the rotation axes of supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies align with each other across billions of light-years. They orient themselves along the filaments of this cosmic web.
To summarize, it is very unlikely that this alignment is random, further supporting the idea of a grand order to the universe’s structure.
The team found that not only did the rotation axes align with each other, they also aligned to the web structure of the universe on a large scale. “The alignments in the new data, on scales even bigger than current predictions from simulations, may be a hint that there is a missing ingredient in our current models of the cosmos,” said Dominique Sluse of the Argelander-Institut für Astronomie in Bonn, Germany and University of Liège, according to the ESO release. While the observations hint at a missing ingredient, they also provide some confirmation of predictions made by numerical models of the evolution of the universe.