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  • Hubble sees magnetic monster in erupting galaxy
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    Envoyée le jeudi 21 août 2008 01:30:22
    par stevebd1
    Vue 50341 fois
    4.8 / 5
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    167 vote(s)

    Hubblecast 18. Date- 20th Aug 08 Source- http://www.spacetelescope.org/videos/archive/topic/hubblecast// News release- http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic0817.html

    'NGC 1275 is one of the closest giant elliptical galaxies and lies at the centre of the Perseus Cluster of galaxies. It is an active galaxy, hosting a supermassive black hole at its core, which blows bubbles of radio-wave emitting material into the surrounding cluster gas. Its most spectacular feature is the lacy filigree of gaseous filaments reaching out beyond the galaxy into the multi-million degree X-ray emitting gas that fills the cluster.

    These filaments are the only visible-light manifestation of the intricate relationship between the central black hole and the surrounding cluster gas. They provide important clues about how giant black holes affect their surrounding environment.

    A team of astronomers using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys have for the first time resolved individual threads of gas which make up the filaments. The amount of gas contained in a typical thread is around one million times the mass of our own Sun. They are only 200 light-years wide, are often surprisingly straight, and extend for up to 20 000 light-years. The filaments are formed when cold gas from the galaxy's core is dragged out in the wake of rising bubbles blown by the black hole.

    It has been a challenge for astronomers to understand how the delicate structures withstood the hostile high-energy environment of the galaxy cluster for more than 100 million years. They should have heated up, dispersed, and evaporated over a very short period of time, or collapsed under their own gravity to form stars. Even more puzzling is the fact that they haven't been ripped apart by the strong tidal pull of gravity in the cluster's core.

    A new study led by Andy Fabian from the University of Cambridge, UK, published in Nature on 21 August 2008 proposes that the magnetic fields hold the charged gas in place and resist forces that would distort the filaments. This skeletal structure has been able to contain and suspend these peculiarly long threads for over 100 million years. "We can see that the magnetic fields are crucial for these complex filaments - both for their survival and for their integrity", said Fabian.

    The new Hubble data also allowed the strength of the magnetic fields in the filaments to be determined from their size. Thinner filaments are more fragile, requiring stronger magnetic fields for support. However, the finer the filaments, the more difficult they are to observe.

    The filamentary system in NGC 1275 provides the most striking example of the workings of extragalactic magnetic fields so far and is a spectacular by-product of the complex interaction between the cluster gas and the supermassive black hole at the galaxy's heart. Similar networks of filaments are found around many other, even more remote, central cluster galaxies. They cannot be observed in anything like the detail of NGC 1275, so the team will apply the understanding gained here to interpret observations of these more distant galaxies.'



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  • CuuijqyMuruqdte

    Yes I understand, but that is assuming the Big Bang is a proven fact, which is simply a theory, that was arrived upon realizing that the known universe, what we can see, is moving in a direction. My comment asks or directs towards how do we know things are moving from "x" point in the universe anyhow? Did they locate the exact spot where the Big Bang supposedly initiated?
    mercredi 23 mai 2012 21:51:52
  • onthecuttingedge2005

    there is no purpose to the existence of the universe other than to create your own opinion of it.
    samedi 03 mars 2012 08:12:39
  • MoonishDesire

    @DevionB @davidmerriss do not underestimate theories, they are theories because they have a lot of mathematical back up that has been redone over and over to prove them. The only downside from a theory is that there could be overlooked factors because we are only human and can see as much as the observable. Notice that observed things are not a better proof than theories. Other than theories and observations there are assumptions, which is what you're both doing.
    vendredi 23 décembre 2011 12:08:01
  • 9441282192

    what a mindboggling proposition. u get the beers
    lundi 28 novembre 2011 08:21:28
  • 9441282192

    :D but u know what, years from now (foreseeable future) computers will be able to do that...but as long as there are still people who discuss this without swearing, there is still hope
    jeudi 24 novembre 2011 00:21:42
  • 9441282192

    sincere question, if the creator has always been, without being created, why is he needed to create???? y couldnt all of creation just the same have always been??
    mardi 08 novembre 2011 07:22:34
  • tjholowaychukable

    you're absolutely retarded. god is such a joke, I cant believe people can be so naive
    lundi 17 octobre 2011 10:07:39
  • ImmortalUniverse

    light cant escape the center of the black hole . we still see the fotons from particles speeding to the horizon of the black hole. and the black hole spits out very small debris aswell . black holes and quasars spit out gamma rays (micro waves) i think they might also be responsible for the bigger waves in our universe or space and time . like electro magnetism and gravity.
    dimanche 09 octobre 2011 02:59:21
  • handsupbud

    TOSH.0 is funnier than this guy.
    mercredi 28 septembre 2011 16:13:55
  • NuthinButIvory

    Did you guys know that all of Hubble's picture are actually black and white. NASA then adds colors to areas to represent different elements within the data recorded. Just thought of that while watching these amazingly perfectly colored and contrasted galaxy images. bit.ly / C6xlT
    mercredi 31 août 2011 21:47:29
  • adam4malkovich

    2:25 ... I WANT THAT SOUNDTRACK! anyone knows it?
    dimanche 28 août 2011 20:16:33
  • MomoTheBellyDancer

    "Why do they say magnetic fields" Because that's what they are. "The filaments are plasma" Nope. Try again.
    dimanche 17 juillet 2011 10:34:00
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