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NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has found evidence of powerful blasts of gases produced by a super massive black hole about 26 million light years from Earth.
This is one of the nearest super massive black holes to Earth that is currently undergoing such violent outbursts, researchers said.
Astronomers found this outburst in the super massive black hole centred in the small galaxy NGC 5195. This companion galaxy is merging with a large spiral galaxy NGC 5194, also known as “The Whirlpool.”
Both of these galaxies are in the Messier 51 galaxy system, located about 26 million light years from Earth.
In the Chandra data, the researchers detected two arcs of X-ray emission close to the centre of NGC 5195.
“We think these arcs represent fossils from two enormous blasts when the black hole expelled material outward into the galaxy,” said Christine Jones of the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics (CfA) in US.
Just outside the outer X-ray arc, the scientists detected a slender region of emission of relatively cool hydrogen gas. This suggests that the hotter, X-ray emitting gas has “snow-plowed,” or swept up, the hydrogen gas from the centre of the galaxy.
This is a clear case where a super massive black hole is affecting its host galaxy in a phenomenon that astronomers call “feedback.”
In NGC 5195, the properties of the gas around the X-ray-glowing arcs suggest that the outer arc has plowed up enough material to trigger the formation of new stars.
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