Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Planets could form around supermassive black holes, new study shows

Add as a preferred source on Google

An artist’s impression of planets orbiting a supermassive black hole. Kagoshima University

At the heart of our galaxy lies a sleeping giant: A supermassive black hole which is 4 million times the mass of our sun. It’s believed that most other galaxies have such an enormous black hole at their center, too. But now, astronomers have discovered something unexpected about these monstrous black holes. It may be possible for planets to orbit around them.

Recommended Videos

It was generally thought that planets only formed from protoplanetary disks of dense dust and gas which are found around stars. The new research from the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan suggests that planets could also form in the doughnut-shaped cloud of dust and gas, called a torus, which is found around a supermassive black hole.

“A torus can contain as much as a hundred thousand times the mass of the sun[‘s] worth of dust. This is a billion times the dust mass of a protoplanetary disk,” Professor Eiichiro Kokubo from the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and colleagues said in a statement.

For this dust to form planets, it would need to first form clumps, which requires areas within the cloud to have different temperatures. “A dust disk around a black hole is so dense that the intense radiation from the central region is blocked and low-temperature regions are formed,” the authors explained. This dust could come together to form proto-planets when the temperature is low enough: “In a low temperature region of a protoplanetary disk, dust grains with ice mantles stick together and evolve into fluffy aggregates.”

The researchers showed that these low temperature regions could give rise to small icy dust particles, which could eventually grow into Earth-sized planets. “Our calculations show that tens of thousands of planets with 10 times the mass of the Earth could be formed around 10 light-years from a black hole,” Professor Kokubo said in the statement. “Around black holes there might exist planetary systems of astonishing scale.”

This surprising finding is challenging the way that we think about planetary formation. “With the right conditions, planets could be formed even in harsh environments, such as around a black hole,” Professor Keiichi Wada, from Hokkaido Universities, said in the statement.

The findings are available to view on pre-publication archive arXiv.org and will be published in the Astrophysical Journal.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Starlink V5 is here, and it’s lighter, smarter, and far more efficient
The next-generation satellite internet kit promises improved efficiency while maintaining high-speed connectivity.
Starlink V4 vs V5

Not every hardware upgrade needs to be about speed. With Starlink V5, SpaceX is betting that a lighter design and lower power consumption matter just as much. The company has officially introduced its next-generation Starlink V5 kit, featuring a smaller and lighter design with significantly improved power efficiency.

Smaller, lighter, and far more efficient

Read more
Frontier joins the Starlink club with high-speed in-flight internet
The carrier plans to roll out SpaceX's satellite-powered Wi-Fi across its fleet starting in 2027.
Frontier Starlink partnership featured

If there's one thing budget airlines aren't exactly known for, it's great onboard Wi-Fi. In Frontier Airlines' case, it hasn't offered in-flight internet at all. That's about to change. Frontier Airlines has announced a partnership with SpaceX's Starlink to bring high-speed, low-latency internet across its fleet. Installations will begin in early 2027, making Frontier the first ultra-low-cost carrier in the United States to adopt Starlink's satellite-powered connectivity.

Streaming, browsing, and even gaming at 35,000 feet

Read more
OpenAI’s first hardware product sounds more like a companion than a speaker
The AI company is reportedly building a mobile home device that understands context and proactively helps users.
OpenAI press image

For months, rumors have suggested that OpenAI's first hardware product could be a wearable AI device, or perhaps even the beginning of its long-term smartphone ambitions. As it turns out, the company's first gadget may be something far simpler, yet arguably far more ambitious. It will help control smart-home appliances, play media, answer questions, respond to messages, and tap into the range of capabilities offered by OpenAI's ChatGPT, according to people familiar with the matter.

OpenAI's first AI device could end up being a speaker, following plenty of hype that the company is actually working on a wearable AI device and might even launch a smartphone down the road. According to a Bloomberg report, the speaker will serve as a human-like AI companion that will integrate directly with the smart home ecosystem.

Read more