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Space

Largest Eruption In the Known Universe Is ~100 Times the Size of Milky Way 73

StartsWithABang writes: At the center of almost every galaxy is a supermassive black hole (SMBH); at the center of almost every cluster is a supermassive galaxy with some of the largest SMBHs in the Universe. And every once in a while, a galactocentric black hole will become active, emitting tremendous amounts of radiation out into the Universe as it devours matter. This radiation can cut across the spectrum, from the X-ray down to the radio. At the heart of MS 0735.6+7421, there's a >10^10 solar mass black hole that appears to have been active for hundreds of millions of years, something unheard of!
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Largest Eruption In the Known Universe Is ~100 Times the Size of Milky Way

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  • Still (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Still sucks less than your mum.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The article has 6 huge pictures without any caption explaining what we're looking at. That makes it closer to a desktop wallpaper collection than to an article.

  • So that's where all the anti-matter went.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I actually enjoy reading these well written pop science blogs, but seriously, does every single post have to be featured on Slashdot???
    This isn't your personal blog outlet.
    No more "Startswithabang" please, unless it's actually News!!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    now with extra wikipedia links to paper over the ugly spammishness a bit. yet no link in the summary to the "creatively interpreted" paper shamelessly ripped off for this bastard blog post.

  • The galaxy is about 2.6 light-years away. That's relatively close. That seems kind of a coincidental. A far away one would probably be detectable because it's so powerful.

    • by d0ran$ ( 844234 )

      Try 2.6 billion light years!

      From the article

      "But 2.6 billion light years away, at the heart of galaxy cluster MS 0735.6+7421, the most powerful active galactic nucleus (AGN) ever discovered resides..."

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        Sorry, that's what I meant. Still relatively close. The diameter of the observable universe is about 30 to 40 billion light years. The chance of the brightest radiation source being only 2.6 BLY away is close enough to suggest some kind of anthropic principle bias in play.

        • Counting time from the Big Bang, it's also in about the last 20% of the development of the Universe. If this sort of thing needs a lot of time to form (and I don't know whether it would), the reason we don't see more distant ones may be that there hasn't been enough time for the light to reach us.

          • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

            That's indeed a plausible explanation for the apparent coincidence. Our view of the "recent" universe is essentially limited by the speed of light to a pretty small chunk of the entire universe. It's almost like being stuck with a cable service that plays mostly old reruns.

    • Re:Largest known? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by St.Creed ( 853824 ) on Monday May 25, 2015 @05:33PM (#49771061)

      I'd hate to be at just a mere 2.6 lightyears distance from an event that caused two volumes both 600000 lightyears across to be filled with hot, X-ray emitting gas.

    • Then on 25 May 2018, we're dead. Because that's 2.6 years from now (I allowed for on Leap Year day).

      And yes, I saw the post below this one...

  • by khedr ( 4126925 )
    [roknasala.com] [roknasala.com]

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