🚀 宇宙の記憶・カレンダー検索
きょう ランダム
翻訳エラー: Exception: 1 日にサービス translate を実行した回数が多すぎます。 Centaurus A: X-Rays from an Active Galaxy
✅ Public Domain
翻訳エラー: Exception: 1 日にサービス translate を実行した回数が多すぎます。
原文(English)
Its core hidden from optical view by a thick lane of dust, the giant elliptical galaxy Centaurus A was among the first objects observed by the orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory. Astronomers were not disappointed, as Centaurus A's appearance in x-rays makes its classification as an active galaxy easy to appreciate. Perhaps the most striking feature of this Chandra false-color x-ray view is the jet, 30,000 light-years long. Blasting toward the upper left corner of the picture, the jet seems to arise from the galaxy's bright central x-ray source -- suspected of harboring a black hole with a million or so times the mass of the Sun. Centaurus A is also seen to be teeming with other individual x-ray sources and a pervasive, diffuse x-ray glow. Most of these individual sources are likely to be neutron stars or solar mass black holes accreting material from their less exotic binary companion stars. The diffuse high-energy glow represents gas throughout the galaxy heated to temperatures of millions of degrees C. At 11 million light-years distant in the constellation Centaurus, Centaurus A (NGC 5128) is the closest active galaxy.

\ この感動を宇宙仲間にシェア /

宇宙をXでシェア
© NASA / APOD