Jet, I Thought the Only Lonely Place Was on the Moon
09.10.2007 00:00 Photo - Source: SPACE.com Image

This new image of the inner radio jet of galaxy M87 reveals a faint counter-jet previously theorized by astrophysicists.
M87, the central galaxy of the Virgo cluster, lies a distance of only 50 million light years from Earth.
The active nucleus of M87 consists of a black hole of approximately 3 billion solar masses. A disk of rapidly rotating gas around the nucleus (accretion disk) surrounds the black hole and matter ejects from the nucleus in a long jet of roughly 5000 light years, perpendicular to the disk.
Russian astrophysicist Iosif Shklovsky theorized in 1964 that such jets in powerful radio galaxies were likely to be two-sided. The one-sided appearance of most of the jets, suggested Shklovsky, might owe to effects caused by the position of the observer. This new image seems to confirm that hypothesis.
--Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie Bonn and SPACE.com Staff
Credit: Y. Y. Kovalev/MPIfR Bonn
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