NASA Telescope Captures Supermassive Black Hole Escaping from Host Galaxy and Creating Star Trails

#NASA #Telescope #Captures #Supermassive #Black #Hole #Escaping #Host #Galaxy #Creating #Star #Trails

GORAJUARA – There are invisible monsters roaming around hurtling across intergalactic space at breakneck speed.

So if it were in our solar system it could travel from Earth to the Moon in 14 minutes.

A supermassive black hole weighing the equivalent of 20 million solar masses has left a “trail” of new stars 200 light years long.

Also read: Get to know Titan: The second largest moon in the solar system which turns out to have a fluid cycle similar to Earth’s

Measuring twice the diameter of our Milky Way galaxy, it is most likely the result of a rare and strange game of galactic billiards between three giant Black Holes.

As reported by Gorajuara from the nasa.gov site, instead of devouring the stars in front of it, this fast black hole instead absorbs the gas in front of it to trigger the formation of new stars along a narrow corridor.

Also Read: 5 Biggest Obstacles for Humans If They Want to Move from Earth to Another Planet in the Solar System

The Black Hole was traveling too fast to need time to snack.

No object like this had ever been seen before, but it was captured accidentally by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope.

Black holes are located at one end of a column that stretches back to its host galaxy.

There is a very bright isolated oxygen node at the outer end of the column.

Researchers believe that the gas may be shaken and heated due to the movement of the black hole colliding with the gas, or it could be radiation from the accretion disk around the black hole.

Also Read:  My wireless earphones pick up the sound of a sex film next door: that's why

Also read: Oda finally reveals the names of the five Gorosei in One Piece 1074, apparently according to the order of the planets in the solar system

The star trail was described as “very unusual”, leading to the conclusion that it was the result of a Black Hole flying through the ring of gas surrounding the host galaxy.

These intergalactic rockets are most likely caused by multiple Supermassive Black Hole collisions.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *