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This set of illustrations explains how a large black hole can form from the direct collapse of a massive cloud of gas within a couple of hundred million years after the Big Bang. Cold streams of gas can lead to the direct collapse of a “seed” black hole of several tens of thousands (at least) solar masses, which can form even prior to any stars forming in the surrounding young galaxy. As the galaxy and black hole grow, eventually the stellar mass content will outweigh the more slowly-growing black hole. This is strongly favored, observationally, over the primordial black hole scenario. (Credit: NASA/STScI/Leah Hustak)

Ask Ethan: Did black holes form directly from the Big Bang?

Even in the very early Universe, there were heavy, supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies. How did they get so big so fast?

Ethan Siegel
12 min readAug 2, 2024

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Some of the most impressive objects in our Universe are supermassive black holes. Weighing in at millions, billions, or even tens of billions of solar masses, they’re the heaviest single objects contained within the known Universe. One of the great problems in modern astrophysics is the open question of how they formed and grew up, and in many ways, the dawn of the JWST era has only intensified that problem. Looking back towards the dawn of time, we find supermassive black holes existed even very early on, reaching hundreds of millions or even a billion solar masses by the time only a few hundred million years had elapsed: when the Universe was just a few percent of its current age.

Was it just plain old astrophysics that led to their creation, with nothing special happening to seed them? Or is it possible that the Universe was actually born with “seed” black holes that would rapidly grow into the supermassive behemoths we observe much later on? That’s what Predrag Branković wants to know, writing in to inquire:

“Did you see this [article]? Is it possible that those…

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Ethan Siegel

The Universe is: Expanding, cooling, and dark. It starts with a bang! #Cosmology Science writer, astrophysicist, science communicator & NASA columnist.