by Northwestern
University A radio image of the center of the Milky Way with a portion of the MeerKAT telescope array in the foreground. The plane of the galaxy is marked by a series of bright features, exploded stars and regions where new stars are being born, and runs diagonally across the image from lower right to top center. The black hole at the center of the Milky Way is hidden in the brightest of these extended regions. The radio bubbles extend from between the two nearest antennas to the upper right corner. Many magnetized filaments can be seen running parallel to the bubbles. In this composite view, the sky to the left of the second nearest antenna is the night sky visible to the unaided eye, and the radio image to the right has been enlarged to highlight its fine features. Credit: SARAO/Oxford/NRAO
A newly spotted pair of
radio-emitting bubbles reach hundreds of light-years tall, dwarfing
all other structures in the central region of the galaxy.
The paper (Inflation of 430-parsec Bipolar Radio Bubbles in the Galactic Centre by an Energetic Event) will publish on September 11 (2019) in the journal Nature.
The study's co-authors represent 15 institutions, including,
For this work, the team used the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory (SARAO) MeerKAT telescope, the largest science project in Africa.
This is the first paper
detailing research completed with MeerKAT's full 64-dish array since
its launch in July 2018.
Northwestern's Yusef-Zadeh, a senior author of the paper, has dedicated his career to studying the physical processes that occur in the Milky Way's mystifying center.
of the central portions of the Milky Way galaxy. The plane of the galaxy is marked by a series of bright features, exploded stars and regions where new stars are being born, and runs horizontally through the image. The black hole at the center of the Milky Way is hidden in the brightest of these extended regions. The radio bubbles discovered by MeerKAT extend vertically above and below the plane of the galaxy. Many magnetized filaments can be seen running parallel to the bubbles.
Credit:
SARAO/Oxford
While their origin has remained an unsolved mystery ever since, the filaments are radio structures stretching tens of light-years long and one light-year wide.
Yusef-Zadeh is a
professor of physics and astronomy at Northwestern's Weinberg
College of Arts and Sciences and a member of
CIERA (Center for Interdisciplinary
Exploration and Research in Astrophysics), an endowed research
center at Northwestern focused on advancing astrophysics studies
with an emphasis on interdisciplinary connections.
Radio emission of this kind is generated in a process known as synchrotron radiation, in which electrons moving at close to light-speed interact with magnetic fields. This produces a characteristic radio signal that can be used to trace energetic regions in space.
The radio light seen by
MeerKAT easily penetrates the dense clouds of dust that block
visible light from the center of the galaxy.
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