Astronomers keep finding mysterious circular rings in the sky and don't know how to explain them |
The enigma began shortly after the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP), a bank of 36 colossal dishes in Western Australia that scans the heavens in the radio part of the electromagnetic spectrum began producing maps of the entire night sky in 2019.
ASKAP scientists were mainly
looking for bright sources that could indicate the presence of black holes or
huge galaxies glowing in radio waves. But
some in the team are always on the hunt "for whatever is weird, whatever
is new, and whatever looks like nothing else," Bärbel Koribalski, a
galactic astronomer at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization (CSIRO) and Western Sydney University in Australia, told Live
Science.
But when telescopes tried to look at the objects in other
wavelengths, such as the optical light our eyes use to see, they turned up
empty, leading the team to dub them odd radio circles (ORCs).
Even stranger, each of the ORCs had a galaxy perched almost exactly
in its center, like a bullseye. The astronomers were able to determine that the
entities were each several billion light-years away and potentially as big as a
few million light-years in diameter.
No one had seen anything like these before, and in a
paper published last year, the team offered 11 potential explanations as to
what they could be, including imaging glitches, warps in space-time known
as Einstein
rings, or a new type of remnant from a supernova explosion.
The researchers have since scanned the skies again with ASKAP and
found one more ORC to add to their collection, an entity about 1 million
light-years across located about 3 billion light-years away. They posted their
findings on April 27 to the preprint database arXiv, and they have been accepted
for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
The team has now narrowed their ideas down to three potential
explanations, Koribalski said. The first is that perhaps there are additional
galaxies forming a cluster near the object and bending bright material into a
ring-like structure. These might simply be too faint to be picked up by current
telescopes.
Another possibility is that the central supermassive black hole of
these galaxies is consuming gas and dust, producing humongous, cone-shaped jets
of particles and energy. Astronomers have often spotted such phenomena in the
universe, though generally, the jets align in such a way with Earth that
observatories see them as moving out of the sides of the galaxy.
Perhaps in the case of the ORCs, the jets are simply pointing
directly towards our planet, Koribalski suggested, so that we are in essence
looking down the barrel of a long tube, creating a circular, two-dimensional
image around a central galaxy.
It's possible that some unknown but highly energetic event took
place in the middle of these galaxies, creating a blast wave that traveled out
as a sphere and resulted in a ring structure. Koribalski isn't yet sure what
type of event could leave such a signature, though perhaps it's a previously
unknown product of crashing black holes such as the kind seen in gravitational
waves at the Large Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the
United States.
But Harish Vedantham, an astronomer at the Netherlands Institute
for Radio Astronomy who was not associated with the work, favors the simpler
idea — that the ORCs are a manifestation of a well-known phenomenon, and are
bright jets shooting from a galaxy at a rarely seen angle.
Vedantham is guided in this by the principle of Occam's razor,
which prefers mundane explanations over strange, new ones. "You can
construct an exotic scenario," he told Live Science. "But the
simplest answer is almost always correct."
Both Vedantham and Koribalski agree that more telescope
observations in other wavelengths should help scientists get a better idea of
what's going on. New data will be forthcoming in the next six months or so,
hopefully adding additional ORCs to their catalog, Koribalski said.
In the meantime, she is somewhat enjoying the mystery. "You become a detective. You look at all the clues and weigh them up against each other," she said. "Sometimes the universe just comes up with weird and wonderful shapes."
Editor's Note: This story was updated to note that the new research
has been accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society.
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