The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Largest explosion ever seen is from black hole

Blast created crater in hot gas that could hold 15 Milky Ways.

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. — Astronomer­s have discovered the biggest explosion seen in the universe, originatin­g from a supermassi­ve black hole.

Scientists reported Thursday that the blast came from a black hole in a cluster of galaxies 390 million lightyears away.

The explosion was so large it carved out a crater in the hot gas that could hold 15 Milky Ways, said lead author Simona Giacintucc­i of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington.

It’s five times bigger than the previous record-holder.

Astronomer­s used NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observator­y to make the discovery, along with a European space observator­y and ground telescopes. They believe the explosion came from the heart of the Ophiuchus cluster of thousands of galaxies: a large galaxy at the center contains a colossal black hole.

Black holes don’t just draw matter in. They also blast out jets of material and energy.

The first hint of this giant explosion actually came in 2016. Chandra images of the Ophiuchus galaxy cluster revealed an unusual curved edge, but scientists ruled out an eruption given the amount of energy that would have been needed to carve out such a large cavity in the gas.

The two space observator­ies, along with radio data from telescopes in Australia and India, confirmed that the curvature was, indeed, part of a cavity.

“The radio data fit inside the X-rays like a hand in a glove,” co-author Maxim Markevitch of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland said in a statement. “This is the clincher that tells us an eruption of unpreceden­ted size occurred here.”

The blast is believed to be over by now: There are no signs of jets currently shooting from the black hole.

More observatio­ns are needed in other wavelength­s to better understand what occurred, according to the team.

 ?? NASA ?? An image provided by NASA shows the Ophiuchus galaxy cluster viewed in a composite of X-ray, radio and infrared data. An inset (lower right) shows data from the Chandra X-ray Observator­y that confirmed a cavity formed by an explosion from a black hole.
NASA An image provided by NASA shows the Ophiuchus galaxy cluster viewed in a composite of X-ray, radio and infrared data. An inset (lower right) shows data from the Chandra X-ray Observator­y that confirmed a cavity formed by an explosion from a black hole.
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