On a clear night, away from city lights, you might see a beautiful structure arched across the sky: our home galaxy, the Milky Way. Since ancient times, humans have marveled at the dark dust clouds silhouetted against the milky background. Just four centuries ago Galileo pointed his telescope at the heavens and found that the “milk” seemingly splashed across the dark expanse was actually the blended light of countless stars.
The architecture of the Milky Way has now been revised again. We and our collaborators have discovered colossal structures that tower over the galactic center and extend tens of thousands of light-years into space. These luminous lobes have gone unnoticed for so long because they glow brightest in gamma rays, which cannot pass through our atmosphere. We needed an entirely new kind of telescope, orbiting in space, to see them.
We do not yet know what is creating these Fermi bubbles, as we have called them. But they appear to be driven by mysterious processes happening deep within the center of the Milky Way—a chaotic region where a supermassive black hole churns whirlpools of hot gas, while violent supernovae bloom like daffodils out of the rich soil of stellar nurseries.
On supporting science journalism
If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.
Like many surprising discoveries, we found the Fermi bubbles serendipitously. Now we have begun to meticulously map their features. The giant bubbles of the Milky Way promise to reveal deep secrets about the structure and history of our galaxy.
The surprise discovery
The first hint that something was amiss in the inner galaxy came not from gamma rays but from microwaves. The year was 2003, and I (Finkbeiner) was trying to better understand the origin of the universe using data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP), at the time the latest, greatest cosmology satellite. I was a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton University, studying how nearby interstellar dust obscured the signal from WMAP's intended target—microwaves from the dim afterglow of the big bang. The dust is interesting in its own right, but to a cosmologist it is like smudges on a window, a nuisance to be wiped away. To do that, we model the dust signal and subtract it from the data.
Because astronomers are forced to observe the cosmos from inside the Milky Way, I also had to subtract the microwave signals created by energetic particles (such as electrons) that fly through the galaxy. In 2003 astronomers already had a fairly sophisticated understanding of these signals, but something did not fit. I could model most of the galactic emission, but when I tried to subtract it from our data on the inner part of the galaxy, there was always something left over. I named this leftover signal the “microwave haze.”
This mysterious signal coming from the center of the galaxy had no known explanation, but astronomers quickly came up with ideas. The most exciting possibility was that the haze was evidence of hidden dark matter. No one knows what dark matter is, only that it interacts with ordinary matter through gravity [see “Mystery of the Hidden Cosmos,” by Bogdan A. Dobrescu and Don Lincoln]. Scientists expect that gravity will pull dark matter toward the center of the galaxy. In the dense cloud of dark matter in the Milky Way's core, dark matter particles will collide more often than elsewhere in the galaxy.
It is thought that dark matter may include both particles and antiparticles. If that is true, then colliding bits of dark matter and dark antimatter will annihilate each other and produce a cascade of intermediate particles. The cascade may ultimately end in the production of high-energy photons (gamma rays), plus a high-energy electron of ordinary matter and a positron—the electron's positively charged, antimatter counterpart.
We cannot see dark matter, but we should be able to see these particles it creates. As the electrons and positrons twist and turn through the tangle of magnetic fields at the galactic center, they should emit synchrotron radiation—the luminous exhaust of charged particles that are forced to make a turn.
The microwave haze we were seeing could have been an artifact of synchrotron radiation generated by dark matter. But how were we to tell for sure? The very same electrons that produce synchrotron microwaves should also be producing gamma rays through two distinct processes: deceleration by other charged particles, and collisions with photons.
If the microwave haze was being caused by high-energy electrons—perhaps as a consequence of dark matter annihilation—then we should also be able to find high-energy gamma rays by using the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, which launched in 2008. I had become a professor and was working in the summer of 2009 with Gregory Dobler, then my postdoctoral fellow, when data from the Fermi satellite was released to the public. We immediately rushed to make our first gamma-ray maps of the galaxy. After a few long days and nights, we found a hazy excess of gamma rays in the inner galaxy that appeared to match the microwave haze. We and our collaborators quickly submitted a paper arguing that the signals were related. We asserted that they are both probably caused by a high-energy population of electrons in the center of the galaxy, but we did not speculate about the source of the electrons.
The next shoe took a bit longer to drop. In October 2009 I was in my office remaking some figures in our first paper with newly released Fermi data. I had noticed that the original gamma-ray data showed faint edges—clear borders where the signal dropped off precipitously. In astronomy, sharp features usually come from transient events. For example, a supernova may send out a shock wave that appears as a distinct edge in our telescopes. In time, sharp features tend to smooth out and fade away.
If dark matter were causing the gamma-ray signal, then the drop-off should have been smooth—fading gently farther away from the galactic center—because dark matter annihilation would have been going on for billions of years. Any sharp edges would have dissipated long ago.
In the first batch of Fermi data, the edges had looked so ratty that we just chalked them up to noise in the signal and ignored them. Now they were appearing in the new data again, and I started to wonder. I showed them to my then graduate students Meng Su and Tracy Slatyer, who agreed that they were real. Then Su really jumped in and started to work—I think almost continuously without sleep—on deriving the exact shape of the edges. Within a matter of days we totally changed our opinion about what was in the data. Dark matter was out. Bubbles were in. In May 2010 Su, Slatyer and I submitted a paper to the Astrophysical Journal describing the structures and naming them “Fermi bubbles” in honor of the Fermi telescope.
Bubble makers
Even though nobody had expected to find bubbles made of high-energy electrons and atomic nuclei (known as cosmic rays) jutting tens of thousands of light-years above the Milky Way, perhaps it should not have been that shocking.
Many other galaxies have bubbles, too. We can see them in x-rays and radio waves. If we had better gamma-ray telescopes, we would probably find them shining in gamma rays as well.
We understand the processes that create the bubbles in many of these other galaxies. In some cases, the bubbles trace their origin to a gigantic black hole—often having the mass of billions of suns—that anchors the galaxy's center. As material from the galaxy falls toward the black hole, it begins to spin like the water draining out of a bathtub. This whirlpool of hot gas and dust creates intense magnetic fields that power jets of radiation and cosmic-ray particles that may inflate the bubbles.
We know that the Milky Way galaxy also has a supermassive black hole at its center, but we have never observed a strong jet of intense radiation streaming out of its core. (If a jet exists, it is not pointed our way, and thank goodness for that.) So we do not have direct evidence that this process is inflating the Fermi bubbles.
On the other hand, a large gas cloud—the Magellanic stream—sits high above the galactic center. If a jet of radiation were pointed there, it would temporarily strip electrons free from atoms in the cloud. As the electrons and ions came back together, the recombination would produce radiation.
In 2013 astronomers found exactly this. Perhaps there was an intense episode of accretion onto the Milky Way's central black hole several million years ago—a high-speed whirlpool of hot, infalling matter that generated high-energy jets and ultraviolet radiation. The radiation in turn would have knocked the electrons around in the Magellanic stream. This event could have also created the Fermi bubbles.
Alternatively, some galaxies have bubbles that are by-products of intense star formation near their centers. In a stellar nursery, stars form in many different sizes. The more massive a star is, the faster it burns its nuclear fuel. When the fuel runs low, the star's core collapses and releases an enormous amount of energy that rips off the outer layers of the star in a supernova explosion, leaving a neutron star or black hole behind. Collectively, these supernovae create a wind of particles that can inflate bubbles around a galactic center.
We know that the center of the Milky Way has also been a region of intense star formation. Several thousand stars around the central black hole are only about six million years old—mere toddlers in cosmic time. Yet if extremely massive stars also formed in this same stellar nursery, six million years would be long enough for them to have already exploded as supernovae. These supernovae would have driven a wind of hot gas out from the galactic center—a wind that might have been powerful enough to inflate the bubbles.
Illuminating the history of the galaxy
The Story Of the Fermi bubbles is wound tightly with the history and evolution of the Milky Way. The bubbles, which recent observations suggest formed about 2.5 million to four million years ago, may shed light on how the black hole at the galaxy's center formed and evolved. The bubbles can also teach us about the physics of how black holes pull in nearby matter and how high-energy cosmic rays interact with interstellar gas. Although structures like the Fermi bubbles exist in other distant galaxies, having an example in the Milky Way lets us study these systems up close.
To this end, we are trying to observe the bubbles using the entire electromagnetic spectrum. One of the most amazing things about the bubbles is that they are so large and luminous in gamma rays yet nearly invisible at other frequencies. New data from the Planck spacecraft, which has mapped microwave radiation across the entire sky, are providing important clues. The Dark Matter Particle Explorer satellite, scheduled for launch in late 2015, will map gamma rays of higher energy than we have seen so far with the Fermi Large Area Telescope.
We are also attempting to map the bubbles in x-rays, although we are limited by current technology. The bubbles are giant structures that tower over the galaxy, but nearly all x-ray satellites currently in orbit have a narrow field of view. The challenge is akin to mapping a mountain range while peering through a soda straw. We look forward to the launch in 2017 of the Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma satellite, which is designed to produce a new survey of the sky in medium-energy x-rays.
It took three centuries from Galileo's discovery that the Milky Way is made of stars for astronomers to realize that our galaxy is just one of many billions of galaxies spread throughout the cosmos. With any luck, we will come to understand the true significance of the Fermi bubbles in less time than that.
A Gamma Ray Eye
Earth’s atmosphere blocks gamma rays, which have energies billions of times that of visible light, so one way astronomers measure them is by getting above the atmosphere. The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is the most powerful gamma-ray observatory ever launched. It contains two main instruments: a burst monitor (not shown) that surveys the entire sky for evidence of transient gamma-ray bursts and the Large Area Telescope (LAT), which is the most sensitive and highest-resolution gamma-ray detector ever launched.
The LAT is radically different from any optical telescope: it has no mirrors, no lenses and no focal plane. Instead it operates more like a particle physics experiment. Each incoming gamma ray recoils off an atomic nucleus in the telescope and transforms into an electron and its antimatter counterpart, a positron. These particles are then tracked through onboard detectors and a calorimeter, which measures energy. Further data analysis on the ground filters out background noise and reveals the direction and energy of the original gamma ray. Most telescopes can see only a tiny fraction of the sky at a time, and astronomers spend a great deal of eff ort deciding which parts of the sky to observe. Competition for telescope time is fierce, and it is generally not feasible to observe a large swath of sky where nothing interesting is expected. In stark contrast, Fermi has a field of view covering a fi fth of the sky, which allows it to observe the breadth of the sky every three hours. This fullsky coverage gives astron omers the chance to fi nd large, faint surprises like the Fermi bubbles. — D.F., M.S. and D.M.