More Images of Sagittarius A
1
Sagittarius A
Chandra X-ray image showing newly discovered X-ray
sources in the innermost 10 light years at the center
of our galaxy. The white dot at the center of the image
is an X-ray source that coincides with the radio
position of the supermassive black-hole candidate
Sagittarius A* to within about 10 light days. The
center of our Milky Way Galaxy is about 26,000 light
years from Earth. This Galaxy, in which we live, has a
full extent of about 100,000 light years.
Image made with the Advanced CCD
Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS)
Credit: NASA/F. Baganoff (MIT)
/G. Garmire (PSU)
2
Sagittarius A
False-color radio image of the HII region Sagittarius
A West. The blue and green spiral pattern is formed by
ionized gas falling towards or orbiting around the
center of our galaxy. The bright white dot at the
center of the image is the supermassive black-hole
candidate Sagittarius A*. This object is believed to be
a black hole containing 2.6 million times the mass of
the Sun.
Image made with the National
Science Foundation's Very Large Array (VLA)
Credit: F. Yusef-Zadeh
(NWU)
3
Chandra X-ray Image with Scale
Bar
Scale bar = 30 arcmin
Credit: NASA/MIT/PSU
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Galactic Center (14 Jan 00)