this post was submitted on 25 Sep 2024
26 points (100.0% liked)

Science

22892 readers
109 users here now

Welcome to Hexbear's science community!

Subscribe to see posts about research and scientific coverage of current events

No distasteful shitposting, pseudoscience, or COVID-19 misinformation.

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

The beginning of the article

Who knew a dragon’s tongue could be so long?

Astronomers announced last week that they had discovered a black hole spitting energy across 23 million light-years of intergalactic space. Two jets, shooting in opposite directions, compose the biggest lightning bolt ever seen in the sky — about 140 times as long as our own Milky Way galaxy is wide, and more than 10 times the distance from Earth to Andromeda, the nearest large spiral galaxy.

Follow-up observations with optical telescopes traced the eruption to a galaxy 7.5 billion light-years away that existed when the universe was less than half its current age of 14 billion years. At the heart of that galaxy was a black hole spewing energy equivalent to the output of more than a trillion stars.

“The Milky Way would be a little dot in these two giant eruptions,” said Martijn Oei, a postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of Technology. Dr. Oei led the team that made the discovery, which was reported in Nature on Sept. 18 and announced on the journal’s cover with an illustration reminiscent of a “Star Wars” poster. The astronomers have named the black hole Porphyrion, after a giant in Greek mythology — a son of Gaia — who fought the gods and lost.

The discovery raises new questions of how such black holes could affect the evolution and structure of the universe.

Wikipedia: Porphyrion (radio galaxy)

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] roger_smith@lemmy.myserv.one 2 points 1 month ago

Whoa, that's a mind-blowing discovery! Just imagining jets of energy stretching across 23 million light-years is wild. It makes our Milky Way feel like a cozy little neighborhood. Naming it Porphyrion after a giant from Greek mythology is pretty fitting, considering the scale of these eruptions. It's fascinating to think about how such powerful black holes could have shaped the universe. Kind of makes you appreciate the relative quiet of our cosmic backyard, doesn't it? I'm all for more space research if it means uncovering epic stuff like this!