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Black holes are double trouble for galaxy
The new scientist ^ | 11/20/02 | Hazel Muir

Posted on 11/20/2002 8:23:34 AM PST by 1bigdictator

Black holes are double trouble for galaxy

12:10 20 November 02

NewScientist.com news service

The optical wavelength image of galaxy NGC 6240 (left) has bright spots now identified by X-rays to be two black holes (right, in blue) (Images: Optical: NASA/STScI, X-ray: NASA/CXC/MPE)

Two monstrous black holes are jostling for power in the same galaxy, the Chandra X-ray satellite has revealed. The pair will slam into each other in a few hundred million years, giving the fabric of space-time a good shake.

"Today for the first time, thanks to the Chandra X-ray observatory's unparalleled ability to spot black holes, we see something that is a harbinger of a cataclysmic event to come," a NASA official told a press conference on Tuesday.

Stefanie Komossa of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany, and her colleagues used Chandra to look at an extraordinarily bright galaxy called NGC 6240, which is about 400 million light years from Earth.

This galaxy has two bright knots near its centre. "With Chandra, we hoped to determine which one, if either, of the nuclei was an active supermassive black hole," said Komossa. "Much to our surprise, we found that both were."

Chandra showed that both regions emit telltale X-rays generated by superhot matter falling onto a black hole near its event horizon, the point of no return.

Gravitational waves

The black holes in NGC 6240 are currently orbiting each other about 3000 light years apart. They will gradually get closer and eventually crash into one another. The dramatic collision will unleash intense radiation and gravitational waves, ripples in the fabric of space-time predicted by Einstein.

Although the astronomers call the discovery "surprising", it makes sense given that the shape of NGC 6240 implies that it is formed from two giant galaxies that have merged together relatively recently.

Most, if not all, large galaxies are thought to harbour a black hole, so it is not startling that a galaxy formed by a merger could have ended up with two.

Galactic collisions are common. In fact, NGC 6240 is a perfect vision of the fate of our own Galaxy, the Milky Way. In about four billion years, the Milky Way will collide with its neighbourhood rival, the giant spiral galaxy M31 in Andromeda.

Hazel Muir

This story is from NewScientist.com's news service - for more exclusive news and expert analysis every week subscribe to New Scientist print edition.


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KEYWORDS: blackhole
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To: WoofDog123
Thera?
Forget Thera. Yellowstone PArk is actually a Caldera. It is literally rising due to a build up of Magma in its magma chamber. Based on the gelogic recorfd it is due to blow, covering the continent in ash.

I see you also saw the Discover Channel show on mega-tsunami.

21 posted on 11/20/2002 4:10:44 PM PST by rmlew
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To: rmlew
Yeah, there is also Ebino Caldera in kyushu, japan, which is the biggest, I believe (could be wrong)....but my post above was just referring to the geological present on earth, i.e. the last few thousand years; i.e. just plain old volcanos cutting off light to earth with ash versus the end -all-life-on-earth super-calderas...I would think one of those going off would be similar to the alvarez meteor impact in yucatan with regards to its effects on the biosphere.

isn't the area of northern ireland known as the giants causeway in atrium (a spectacular bunch of basalt columns) one edge of a caldera stretching between isle of man, scotland, and ireland also?
22 posted on 11/21/2002 7:48:33 AM PST by WoofDog123
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To: WoofDog123
AS a New Yorker, it is reassuring to know that I can die of manything besides an Islamofascist with a nuke.
Please excuse me while I take out life insurance.
23 posted on 11/21/2002 6:06:05 PM PST by rmlew
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