Milky Way's Monster Black Hole Gets Colossal Meal
Dec 14, 2011
The giant black hole at the heart of our Milky Way galaxy will soon rip apart a vast cloud of gas in a cosmic feast that could reveal just how supermassive black holes gobble their meals, scientists say.
The black hole, which contains about 4.3 million times the mass of the sun,is thought to lurk at the heart of the Milky Way. Scientists have named the monster black hole Sagittarius A* and pinpointed its location based on clues from intense radio emissions — matter near a black hole can release extraordinary amounts of light, including radio waves, as it gets super-heated rushing toward the point of no return.
Aside from radio waves and some modest X-ray or infrared flares, Sagittarius A* is surprisingly faint, suggesting that activity around it currently is very low, researchers said. This limits what investigators can deduce about its properties and behavior, as well as those of the other supermassive black holes thought to dwell in the cores of virtually all large galaxies.
read on: http://news.yahoo.com/milky-ways-monster-black-hole-gets-colossal-meal-180704815.html
Further very interesting information that develops the above here.
from Rick Sebastian & Kathy Consigli Superwave research:
http://www.themistsofavalon.net/t49p315-nexus-meditations#71472
Love Always
mudra
Dec 14, 2011
The giant black hole at the heart of our Milky Way galaxy will soon rip apart a vast cloud of gas in a cosmic feast that could reveal just how supermassive black holes gobble their meals, scientists say.
The black hole, which contains about 4.3 million times the mass of the sun,is thought to lurk at the heart of the Milky Way. Scientists have named the monster black hole Sagittarius A* and pinpointed its location based on clues from intense radio emissions — matter near a black hole can release extraordinary amounts of light, including radio waves, as it gets super-heated rushing toward the point of no return.
Aside from radio waves and some modest X-ray or infrared flares, Sagittarius A* is surprisingly faint, suggesting that activity around it currently is very low, researchers said. This limits what investigators can deduce about its properties and behavior, as well as those of the other supermassive black holes thought to dwell in the cores of virtually all large galaxies.
read on: http://news.yahoo.com/milky-ways-monster-black-hole-gets-colossal-meal-180704815.html
Further very interesting information that develops the above here.
from Rick Sebastian & Kathy Consigli Superwave research:
http://www.themistsofavalon.net/t49p315-nexus-meditations#71472
Love Always
mudra