Core of Galaxy NGC4261: dust disk around a black hole | 4/12/1995 | ||
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This is a Hubble Space Telescope image of an 800-light-year-wide spiral-shaped disk of dust fueling a massive black hole in the center of galaxy, NGC 4261, located 100 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Virgo. | ||
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Image Credit: L. Ferrarese (Johns Hopkins University) and NASA. | |||
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This
is a Hubble Space Telescope image of an 800-light-year-wide spiral-shaped
disk of dust fueling a massive black hole in the center of galaxy, NGC 4261,
located 100 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation
Virgo.
By measuring the speed of gas swirling around the black hole, astronomers calculate that the object at the center of the disk is 1.2 billion times the mass of our Sun, yet concentrated into a region of space not much larger than our solar system. |
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The
strikingly geometric disk -- which contains enough mass to make 100,000
stars like our Sun -- was first identified in Hubble observations made in
1992. These new Hubble images reveal for the first time structure in the
disk, which may be produced by waves or instabilities in the disk.
Hubble also reveals that the disk and black hole are offset from the center of NGC 4261, implying some sort of dynamical interaction is taking place, that has yet to be fully explained. |
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