The sky is full of weird X-shaped galaxies. Here’s why.

https://www.space.com/x-shaped-galaxy-explained-by-hydrodynamical-backflow.html

Spied through a normal telescope, the galaxy PKS 2014−55 is an unremarkable smudge of bright light. But look again in radio wavelengths, and you’ll see that the galaxy is hiding a gargantuan, glowing treasure at its center — and X marks the spot.

PKS 2014−55 is an X-shaped radio galaxy (XRG), an unusual type of galaxy that looks like an enormous X in the night sky when imaged in radio wavelengths. The long arms of the X — each one about 100 times longer than the Milky Way — are actually a blazing-fast soup of particles and magnetic fields, blasted out of the galaxy’s central black hole and traveling for millions of light-years into space, far beyond the galaxy’s edge.

via Space.com https://ift.tt/2CqOJ61

May 17, 2020 at 09:18AM

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