Hubble
Captures an Extraordinary and Powerful Active Galaxy
Resembling a swirling witch's cauldron of glowing
vapors, the black hole-powered core of a nearby active galaxy appears
in this colorful NASA Hubble Space Telescope image. The galaxy lies
13 million light-years away in the southern constellation Circinus.
This galaxy is designated a type 2 Seyfert, a class
of mostly spiral galaxies that have compact centers and are believed
to contain massive black holes. Seyfert galaxies are themselves
part of a larger class of objects called Active Galactic Nuclei
or AGN. AGN have the ability to remove gas from the centers of their
galaxies by blowing it out into space at phenomenal speeds. Astronomers
studying the Circinus galaxy are seeing evidence of a powerful AGN
at the center of this galaxy as well.
Much of the gas in the disk of the Circinus spiral
is concentrated in two specific rings -- a larger one of diameter
1,300 light-years, which has already been observed by ground-based
telescopes, and a previously unseen ring of diameter 260 light-years.
In the Hubble image, the smaller inner ring is located
on the inside of the green disk. The larger outer ring extends off
the image and is in the plane of the galaxy's disk. Both rings are
home to large amounts of gas and dust as well as areas of major
"starburst" activity, where new stars are rapidly forming on timescales
of 40 - 150 million years, much shorter than the age of the entire
galaxy.
At the center of the starburst rings is the Seyfert
nucleus, the believed signature of a supermassive black hole that
is accreting surrounding gas and dust. The black hole and its accretion
disk are expelling gas out of the galaxy's disk and into its halo
(the region above and below the disk). The detailed structure of
this gas is seen as magenta-colored streamers extending towards
the top of the image.
In the center of the galaxy and within the inner starburst
ring is a V-shaped structure of gas. The structure appears whitish-pink
in this composite image, made up of four filters. Two filters capture
the narrow lines from atomic transitions in oxygen and hydrogen;
two wider filters detect green and near-infrared light. In the narrow-band
filters, the V-shaped structure is very pronounced. This region,
which is the projection of a three-dimensional cone extending from
the nucleus to the galaxy's halo, contains gas that has been heated
by radiation emitted by the accreting black hole. A "counter-cone,"
believed to be present, is obscured from view by dust in the galaxy's
disk. Ultraviolet radiation emerging from the central source excites
nearby gas causing it to glow. The excited gas is beamed into the
oppositely directed cones like two giant searchlights.
Located near the plane of our own Milky Way Galaxy,
the Circinus galaxy is partially hidden by intervening dust along
our line of sight. As a result, the galaxy went unnoticed until
about 25 years ago. This Hubble image was taken on April 10, 1999
with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2.
The research team, led by Andrew S. Wilson of the
University of Maryland, is using these visible light images along
with near-infrared data to further understand the dynamics of this
powerful galaxy.
Credits: NASA,
Andrew S. Wilson (University of Maryland); Patrick L. Shopbell (Caltech);
Chris Simpson (Subaru Telescope); Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann and F.
K. B. Barbosa (UFRGS, Brazil); and Martin J. Ward (University of
Leicester, U.K.)
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