3C295: Radio Galaxy (Radio) 30/08/1999
The radio image shows many similarities to the X ray image: two lobes on either side of the nucleus. The lobes have bright spots where the radiation is especially intense. The radio lobes are produced by the synchrotron process, ...
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Image Credit: NRAO, VLS, R. Perley & G. Taylor.
 

The radio image shows many similarities to the X ray image: two lobes on either side of the nucleus. The lobes have bright spots where the radiation is especially intense. The radio lobes are produced by the synchrotron process, where high-energy electrons move through a magnetic field and radiate radio waves. If the energies of the electrons are high enough, this process can also produce optical and X radiation. Study of the radio lobes indicates that they were blasted out at high speeds from the supermassive black hole in the nucleus less than a million years ago.
Angular size of box = 8 arcsec, corresponding to 180,000 light years.
 
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