July 19, 2020

Chandra Deep Field-South with the 28 heavily obscured supermassive black holes

An article published in “The Astrophysical Journal” reports the discovery of 28 heavily obscured supermassive black holes. A team led by Erini Lambrides of Johns Hopkins University combined over 80 days of observations of NASA’s Chandra space telescope in the survey known as Chandra Deep Field-South (CDF-S) with the ones of other telescopes that include Hubble and Spitzer to identify active galactic nuclei whose emissions at many wavelengths were blocked by the huge cocoon of materials that surrounds them. The heavily obscured supermassive black holes are among the most sought after because understanding their growth mechanisms helps to understand the evolution of these extreme objects that can have masses even billions of times the Sun’s.