Tale of Two Black Holes [X-ray]
January 8th, 2015
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/GSFC

The real monster black hole is revealed in this new image from NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array of colliding galaxies Arp 299. This image shows the NuSTAR data alone.

Before NuSTAR, astronomers knew that the each of the two galaxies in Arp 299 held a supermassive black hole at its heart, but they weren't sure if one or both were actively chomping on gas in a process called accretion. The new high-energy X-ray data reveal that the supermassive black hole in the galaxy on the right is indeed the hungry one, releasing energetic X-rays as it consumes gas.

In this image, X-rays with energies of 4 to 6 kiloelectron volts are red, energies of 6 to 12 kiloelectron volts are green, and 12 to 25 kiloelectron volts are blue.

Observation

About the Object

Name
Arp 299NGC 3690IC 694
Type
Galaxy > Type > Interacting
Galaxy > Grouping > Multiple
Distance
134,000,000 Light Years

Color Mapping

Band Wavelength Telescope
X-ray 5.0 keV NuSTAR
X-ray 8.0 keV NuSTAR
X-ray 20.0 keV NuSTAR

Astrometrics

Position ()
RA = 11h 28m 32.0s
Dec = 58° 34' 0.2"
Field of View
3.1 x 3.1 arcminutes
Orientation
North is 6.8° left of vertical