Exif MM * } 2 i This pair of objects comes from a study of seven triple galaxy mergers. By using Chandra and other telescopes, astronomers determined what happened to the supermassive black holes at the centers of the galaxies after the collision of three galaxies. The results show a range of outcomes: a single growing supermassive black hole, four doubles, a triple, and one system where no black holes are rapidly pulling in matter. Two of the doubles are shown here in X-rays (Chandra) and optical light (SDSS and Hubble). This information tells astronomers more about how galaxies and the giant black holes in their centers grow over cosmic time. 0231 http://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/
This pair of objects comes from a study of seven triple galaxy mergers. By using Chandra and other telescopes, astronomers determined what happened to the supermassive black holes at the centers of the galaxies after the collision of three galaxies. The results show a range of outcomes: a single growing supermassive black hole, four doubles, a triple, and one system where no black holes are rapidly pulling in matter. Two of the doubles are shown here in X-rays (Chandra) and optical light (SDSS and Hubble). This information tells astronomers more about how galaxies and the giant black holes in their centers grow over cosmic time.
Triple Galaxy Mergers
Galaxies Hit Single, Doubles, and a Triple (Growing Black Holes)
14969
Chandra X-ray Observatory
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
ACIS
-
159
159
66.51151350768
74.462670488764
1.3227506765297E+02
1.1246469348441E+01
-1.10055557969540e-05
1.10055557969543e-05
Purple
Pseudocolor
D.5.1.7
D.5.5.2
19800
2013-02-28-0000
http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/image_use.html
Photoshop 3.0 8BIM Z %G @Galaxies Hit Single, Doubles, and a Triple (Growing Black Holes) Triple Galaxy Mergers7 20210114i bWhen three galaxies collide, what happens to the central black holes growing at the cores of each?n X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ. of Michigas Chandra X-ray Observatoryx|This pair of objects comes from a study of seven triple galaxy mergers. By using Chandra and other telescopes, astronomers determined what happened to the supermassive black holes at the centers of the galaxies after the collision of three galaxies. The results show a range of outcomes: a single growing supermassive black hole, four doubles, a triple, and one system where no black holes are rapidly pulling in matter. Two of the doubles are shown here in X-rays (Chandra) and optical light (SDSS and Hubble). This information tells astronomers more about how galaxies and the giant black holes in their centers grow over cosmic time.8BIM% b4w#Wъ] l Adobe d ``
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