Astronomers want your help to identify thousands of black holes

Astronomers are asking for the public’s help in identifying black holes using data from the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) telescope. LOFAR is a radio telescope that has completed a huge survey of the sky and spotted many potential black holes, but the data requires further classification before it can be used for research purposes.

“LOFAR’s new survey has revealed millions of previously undetected radio sources,” Huub Röttgering, astronomer from Leiden University in The Netherlands and first chair of LOFAR’s Astronomy Research Committee, said in a statement. “With the help of the public we can investigate the nature of these sources: Where are their black holes? In what kind of galaxies are the black holes located?’’

Recommended Videos

The sources that LOFAR has identified in its radio survey are called Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), which are powered by supermassive black holes. These enormous black holes pull material that comes near to them due to their immense gravity. When gas comes close to the black hole, it impacts particles spinning around the black hole and creates a shockwave of infrared light. This infrared light is sent out in two diametrically opposed jets which are sent spewing from the black hole.

By observing these jets, astronomers can learn about how black holes form and evolve. LOFAR has imaged hundreds of thousands of jets, and the scientists use computer algorithms to identify the source of the radio signals detected. However, there are limitations to a computer’s ability to accurately detect whether a radio signal is coming from a single source or multiple sources.

This is where the help of the public comes in. Interested participants can help by classifying images of black holes which show both data from optical telescopes and radio data from LOFAR. Volunteers will identify whether radio emissions appear to come from one source or from separate sources.

Tim Shimwell, ASTRON and Leiden University, explained how this can help the team in their investigation of black holes: “Your task is to match the radio sources with the right galaxy,” he said. “This will help researchers understand how radio sources are formed, how black holes evolve, and how vast quantities of material can be ejected into deep space with such unprecedented amounts of energy.”

You can try out spotting black holes for yourself at the Zooniverse website.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
You can help teach NASA rovers to explore Mars with the AI4Mars project

Artificial intelligence could be a huge help to Mars rovers like NASA's Curiosity or Perseverance, but first these A.I. systems need to be trained on what to look for. A NASA project invites members of the public to help identify features of the Martian landscape, in order to train an algorithm that future rovers could use to navigate around the red planet.

The robotic arm of NASA’s Perseverance rover is visible in this image used by the AI4Mars project. Users outline and identify different rock and landscape features to help train an artificial intelligence algorithm that will help improve the capabilities of Mars rovers. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Read more
This black hole is creating enormous glowing X-ray rings

A Quick Look at V404 Cygni

Astronomers are observing an unusual black hole which is surrounded by enormous X-ray rings. Using the Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, researchers have been investigating how this strange phenomenon came to be and what it can tell us about both black holes and cosmic dust.

Read more
Astronomers get closest look yet at epic explosion in our ‘cosmic backyard’

Artist's impression of a relativistic jet of a gamma-ray burst (GRB), breaking out of a collapsing star, and emitting very-high-energy photons. DESY, Science Communication Lab

When you think of the most dramatic events in the universe, you might think about stars going supernova or about black holes colliding and sending ripples through spacetime. But the most powerful explosions we know of are something more specific which we barely understand: Gamma-ray bursts. Lasting anywhere from milliseconds to hours, these bursts are a million trillion times as bright as the sun, which means they give out more energy in the few seconds they typically last than the sun will give out over its entire 10-billion-year life.

Read more