The property was named Alcyoneus after the son of Uranus.
International Group Scientists during observations accidentally discovered a new radio galaxy. It turned out to be the largest of all that was discovered before and occupies about half a degree on the celestial sphere, reports the Chronicle.info with reference to Channel 24.
At the center of many galaxies is a supermassive black hole that absorbs the surrounding matter, which actively radiates energy in different ranges — this is called «active galactic nucleus». But sometimes such a black hole causes the formation of two oppositely directed flows of matter — jets. They, also radiating, increase the size of the galaxy in the radio range. This is the so-called radio galaxy, and scientists have found the largest of all known.
More about the discovery
Scientists have discovered a radio galaxy in the sky that spans at least 16 million light-years. The object was named Alcyoneus in honor of the son of Uranus. For comparison, the distance to the Andromeda galaxy is about 2.5 million light years. The discovery was made possible through the use of the low-frequency radio interferometer LOFAR.
The galaxy itself, which we see as a radio galaxy, is 3 billion light-years away from us — at this distance, the size of the radio galaxy is comparable to the size of the full moon. It would seem that 3 billion light years is not so much, and therefore we had to discover this source of radiation earlier. But, scientists say, the point here is that the jets radiate rather weakly and therefore have so far remained unnoticed.
p>So what allowed Alcyoneus to grow to such a record size?
- At first, astronomers assumed that this was due to a very massive black hole that was absorbing the matter of the star cluster.
- Also there was the idea of extremely powerful jets.
Scientists were surprised when they found that the largest known radio galaxy did not differ in anything other than size: no additional source of «food» for a black hole, nor super-powerful jets. Therefore, while researchers do not know what caused the growth to a phenomenal size. Therefore, now the attention of radio astronomers will be concentrated on the environment of the object — perhaps there is a clue.