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Judi Lynn

(160,631 posts)
Wed Aug 19, 2020, 11:44 PM Aug 2020

Mysterious gamma-ray 'heartbeat' detected from cosmic gas cloud

By Samantha Mathewson 16 hours ago



An artist's representation of the microquasar SS 433 beating in unison with the gas cloud known
as Fermi J1913+0515.
(Image: © DESY Science Communication Lab)

A cosmic gas cloud has a mysterious gamma-ray "heartbeat" that appears to be in sync with a neighboring black hole.

Using data from the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico and NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, an international team of researchers found the "heartbeat" in a cosmic gas cloud in the constellation Aquila, the eagle. The cloud "beats" in rhythm with a miniature black hole located roughly 100 light-years away, suggesting the objects are connected in some way, according to a statement from the DESY national research center in Germany.

The black hole is part of a microquasar system known as SS 433, which includes a giant star that is approximately 30 times the mass of the sun. A microquasar is just a small quasar, the brightest type of object in the universe, which consists of a large black hole that emits extraordinary amounts of light as it gobbles up its stellar neighbors. As the two objects in SS 433 orbit each other, the black hole pulls in matter from the giant star, creating an accretion disk around the black hole.

"This material accumulates in an accretion disc before falling into the black hole, like water in the whirl above the drain of a bath tub," Jian Li, lead author of the study from the DESY national research center, said in the statement. "However, a part of that matter does not fall down the drain but shoots out at high speed in two narrow jets in opposite directions above and below the rotating accretion disk."

More:
https://www.space.com/mysterious-gamma-ray-heartbeat-gas-cloud.html?utm_source=notification




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