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Cosmic Searchlight
Streaming out from the center of the galaxy M87 like
a cosmic searchlight is one of nature's most amazing phenomena,
a black-hole-powered jet of electrons and other sub-atomic particles
traveling at nearly the speed of light. In this NASA Hubble Space
Telescope image, the blue of the jet contrasts with the yellow glow
from the combined light of billions of unseen stars and the yellow,
point-like globular clusters that make up this galaxy.
At first glance, M87 (also known as NGC 4486) appears
to be an ordinary giant elliptical galaxy; one of many ellipticals
in the nearby Virgo cluster of galaxies. However, as early as 1918,
astronomer H.D. Curtis noted a "curious straight ray" protruding
from M87. In the 1950s when the field of radio was blossoming, one
of the brightest radio sources in the sky, Virgo A, was discovered
to be associated with M87 and its jet.
After decades of study, prompted by these discoveries,
the source of this incredible amount of energy powering the jet
has become clear. Lying at the center of M87 is a supermassive black
hole, which has swallowed up a mass equivalent to 2 billion times
the mass of our Sun. The jet originates in the disk of superheated
gas swirling around this black hole and is propelled and concentrated
by the intense, twisted magnetic fields trapped within this plasma.
The light that we see (and the radio emission) is produced by electrons
twisting along magnetic field lines in the jet, a process known
as synchrotron radiation, which gives the jet its bluish tint.
M87 is one of the nearest and is the most well-studied
extragalactic jet, but many others exist. Wherever a massive black
hole is feeding on a particularly rich diet of disrupted stars,
gas, and dust, the conditions are right for the formation of a jet.
Interestingly, a similar phenomenon occurs around young stars, though
at much smaller scales and energies.
At a distance of 50 million light-years, M87 is too
distant for Hubble to discern individual stars. The dozens of star-like
points swarming about M87 are, instead, themselves clusters of hundreds
of thousands of stars each. An estimated 15,000 globular clusters
formed very early in the history of this galaxy and are older than
the second generation of stars, which huddle closer to the center
of the galaxy.
The data were collected with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2 in 1998 by J.A. Biretta, W.B. Sparks, F.D. Macchetto, and
E.S. Perlman (STScI). The Hubble Heritage team combined these exposures
of ultraviolet, blue, green, and infrared light in order to create
this color image.
Credit:
NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
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