NASA/JPL-Caltech
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Illustration of super-fast winds from a galaxy’s supermassive black hole escaping into space.
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Nationalgeographic.co.id—Using data collected by the Large Area Telescope aboard NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and a stacking technique that combines signals that are too weak to be observed alone, the researchers were able to detect gamma rays from UFO (ultra-fast outflows) in several galaxy nearby for the first time, providing a basis for scientists to understand what is happening in the galaxy Our own Milky Way.
UFO is a very fast outflow, it is a strong wind launched from black hole the closest supermassive that scientists believe plays an important role in regulating growth black hole itself and galaxy parent.
Collaborative research conducted by Clemson University scientists have published the results of their research in Astrophysical Journal on November 10, 2021 entitled Gamma Rays from Fast Black-hole Winds. The research was carried out in collaboration with the College of Charleston, the University of Chicago, and a number of other researchers who are part of the Fermi-LAT Collaboration, which includes hundreds of scientists from 12 countries. The study outlines emission detection gamma rays of a UFO launched by black hole supermasif.
“Although these winds are difficult to detect, it is thought that they play an important role in how black hole Big and galaxy the parent itself grows,” said Chris Karwin, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the Faculty of Science, as reported Tech Explorist.
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