What is the hottest place in the universe?

An fire hot ball appears in an image of a quasar taken by the Hubble Space Telescope.
An image of the quasar 3C273 observed by the Hubble Space Telescope. (Image credit: NASA)

While the sun is the most scorching object in our solar system, its temperatures pale in comparison to several other cosmic bodies. So what is the hottest place in the universe? 

"I think a good answer is very near a supermassive black hole, especially a supermassive black hole that's accreting, which just means it's eating gas," Daniel Palumbo, a postdoctoral fellow at the Black Hole Initiative, a research group at Harvard University, told Live Science. Feeding black holes that host relativistic jets — or enormous beams of material being propelled to "very near the speed of light" — are particularly sweltering, he added. 

But the answer to where the single hottest place in the universe is may also depend on when you ask the question, according to Koushik Chatterjee, a fellow at the Black Hole Initiative. While he agrees that black holes are likely the steadily hottest spots, anywhere "there are cataclysmic events; that's where the hottest place would be," he said.

When two big celestial bodies collide, the resulting explosion can produce extremely high temperatures. For example, two neutron stars — the collapsed cores of massive stars — crashing into each other can produce a temperature of 1.5 trillion F (800 billion C), according to a 2019 study published in the journal Nature Physics. A black hole colliding with a neutron star could also emit incredibly high temperatures, Chatterjee said. But like a flash in a pan, these cosmic collisions are often fleeting.

It's also difficult to pin down the single hottest place in the universe because "it's tricky to study the temperatures of very distant objects; you can't just measure it with a thermometer," Palumbo said, and there is still a lot of uncertainty surrounding the precise temperatures of black holes.

"We let the light from … very distant objects come to our telescopes," Richard Kelley, a senior scientist of solar studies at NASA, told Live Science. "That light goes down and goes into a sensor that can measure the energy or the wavelength of the radiation, we build up a spectrum, and then by analyzing the spectrum we can infer temperature."

A future X-ray observatory called the X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM) will help scientists more accurately measure high-temperature gases in space, Kelley said. As more advanced tools continue to be developed, scientists may find areas that are even hotter than quasar 3C273.

"I think what would be very fair to say is that as it stands, the tools we have for understanding the temperatures of material around supermassive black holes are limited but rapidly evolving," Palumbo said.

Kiley Price
Contributor

Kiley Price is a former Live Science staff writer based in New York City. Her work has appeared in National Geographic, Slate, Mongabay and more. She holds a bachelor's degree from Wake Forest University, where she studied biology and journalism, and has a master's degree from New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program.