Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · May 29
Astronomers Detected 140 Trillion Earth Oceans of Water Vapor Around Quasar APM 08279+5255
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · May 29

Astronomers Detected 140 Trillion Earth Oceans of Water Vapor Around Quasar APM 08279+5255

1 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · May 29

Summary

  • More than 12 billion light-years away, quasar APM 08279+5255 is surrounded by water vapor totaling about 140 trillion Earth oceans—the largest and most distant such detection reported.
  • Two teams found the vapor independently: Caltech's Dariusz Lis detected one water signature in 2010, and JPL's Matt Bradford identified several more spectral lines that allowed the mass estimate.
  • Hundreds of light-years across, the cloud is not an ocean-like body but extremely diffuse gas—about 300 trillion times less dense than Earth's atmosphere—even though it is unusually warm and dense for galactic gas.
  • A 20 billion-solar-mass black hole powers the quasar, whose intense infrared and X-ray radiation lights the gas and makes the water lines visible.
  • Seen when the universe was under 2 billion years old, the vapor matters less as a surprise than as a tracer for studying temperature and density around an early-universe galaxy.

Insights

Could vast water clouds have fueled the impossibly massive black holes now found in the early universe?
How has the JWST changed our view of these ancient water reservoirs and the galaxies they inhabit?
Are giant primordial black holes born from decaying dark matter instead of just collapsing gas clouds?