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Astronomy in the News

 

Mercury Spring 2009 Table of Contents

Centaurus A

The color composite image of Centaurus A reveals the lobes and jets emanating from the active galaxy’s central black hole. See the back cover for a larger image.

Credit: ESO / WFI (Optical).
MPIfR / ESO/ APEX /A.Weiss et al. (Submillimetre).
NASA / CXC / CfA / R.Kraft et al. (X-ray).

Black Hole Outflows From Centaurus

ESO

Astronomers have a new insight into the active galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128), as the jets and lobes emanating from the central black hole have been imaged at submillimetre wavelengths for the first time. The new data, from the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope in Chile, which is operated by ESO, have been combined with visible and X-ray wavelengths to produce this striking new image.

Centaurus A is our nearest giant galaxy, at a distance of about 13 million light-years in the southern constellation of Centaurus. It is an elliptical galaxy, currently merging with a companion spiral galaxy, resulting in areas of intense star formation and making it one of the most spectacular objects in the sky. Centaurus A hosts a very active and highly luminous central region, caused by the presence of a supermassive black hole is the source of strong radio and X-ray emission.

In the image, we see the dust ring encircling the giant galaxy, and the fast-moving radio jets ejected from the galaxy centre, signatures of the supermassive black hole at the heart of Centaurus A. In submillimetre light, we see not only the heat glow from the central dust disc, but also the emission from the central radio source and -- for the first time in the submillimetre -- the inner radio lobes north and south of the disc. In the X-ray emission, we see the jets emerging from the centre of Centaurus A and, to the lower right of the galaxy, the glow where the expanding lobe collides with the surrounding gas, creating a shockwave.

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