Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Black hole captured in mid-belch

Radio telescopes provide first look at jet formation

Artist's conception of region near supermassive black hole where twisted magnetic fields propel and shape jet of particles.
NRAO/AUI/NSF
Slide show
  Space shots: Deep space
See distant moons, a space capsule, the southern polar region of Mars and other out-of-this-world highlights.

more photos

  RSS feeds on msnbc.com

Add these headlines to your news reader

FREE VIDEO
Sound of a black hole
Watch a NASA animation zooming in on a black hole as you listen to black hole sounds. The sounds are X-ray data from GRS 1915 105, translated into audible pulsations by MIT’s Edward Morgan.

NASA

By Julie Steenhuysen
updated 5:53 p.m. ET April 23, 2008

CHICAGO - Using powerful radio telescopes, scientists have captured a supermassive black hole just as it was belching out a jet of supercharged particles, offering a first look at how these cosmic jets are formed, they said on Wednesday.

Supermassive black holes form the core of many galaxies and astronomers have long believed they were responsible for ejecting jets of particles at nearly the speed of light.

But just how they did it had remained a mystery.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

An international team of researchers led by Alan Marscher of Boston University just got its first peek.

Marscher's team aimed the National Radio Astronomy Observatory's Very Long Baseline Array — a system of 10 radio telescopes — at the galaxy BL Lacertae.

A kind of supermassive black hole known as a blazar was suspected of spewing out a pair of forceful streams of plasma some 950 million light years from Earth.

A light year, the distance light travels in a year, is about 6 trillion miles.

What they saw was a close up of this charged material winding in corkscrew fashion out of the supermassive black hole, behaving just as astronomers had predicted.

"We have gotten the clearest look yet at the innermost portion of the jet, where the particles actually are accelerated," Marscher, whose study appears in the journal Nature, said in a statement.

Slide show
Image: Nebula
  Galactic gems
See distant moons, a space capsule, the southern polar region of Mars and other out-of-this-world highlights.

more photos

"It helps us understand how these objects are able to accelerate particles up to the near velocity of light," said University of Michigan astronomy professor Hugh Aller, who worked on the project.

A black hole is a concentration of mass so dense that little can escape its gravitational pull. Aller said in a telephone interview that as objects fall into the black hole, others get shot out at very high velocities.

But the trick is capturing enough data at the right time to study how this works.

"We never know when these objects will go off. It depends on when the object falls into it," Aller said.

He said the acceleration process is similar to the output of a jet engine. "We think it is focused by a nozzle of sorts and it comes out at us."

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.
Rate this story LowHigh
 • View Top Rated stories

Sponsored links

Resource guide

Search Jobs

Find your next car

Find Your Dream Home

Find a business to start

$7 trades, no fee IRAs