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Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2020/03/11
An Extreme Black Hole Outburst
Image credits:
Michael F. Corcoran
(
NASA
,
Catholic U.
,
HEAPOW
)
Explanation:
Astronomers believe they have now found the most powerful example of a black hole outburst yet seen in our Universe.
The composite
, false-color
featured image
is of a
cluster of galaxies
in the constellation of
Ophiuchus, the serpent-bearer
. The composite includes
X-ray
images (from the
Chandra X-ray Observatory
and
XMM-Newton
) in purple, and a
radio
image (from India's
Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope
) in blue (along with an
infrared
image of the galaxies and stars in the field in white for good measure). The dashed line marks the border of a
cavity blown
out by the
supermassive black hole
which lurks at the center of the galaxy marked by the cross.
Radio
emission fills this cavity.
This big blowout
is believed to be due to the
black hole
eating too much and experiencing a transient bout of 'black hole nausea', which resulted in the ejection of a
powerful radio jet
blasting into intergalactic space. The amount of energy needed to blow this cavity is equivalent to about
10 billion supernova explosions
.
Authors & editors:
Robert J. nemiroff
(MTU)
&
Jerry T. Bonnell
(UMCP)
Web designed by Simon G. Kupisz, 2020
NASA Official:
Phillip Newman
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at
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/
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