Milky Way Galaxy The nucleusastronomy

The structure and dynamics of the Milky Way Galaxy » Structure of the spiral system » The nucleus

At the very centre of the Galaxy lies a remarkable object—in all likelihood a massive black hole surrounded by an accretion disk of high-temperature gas. Neither the central object nor any of the material immediately around it can be observed at optical wavelengths because of the thick screen of intervening dust in the Milky Way. The object, however, is readily detectable at radio wavelengths and has been dubbed Sagittarius A* by radio astronomers. Somewhat similar to the centres of active galaxies (see below), though on a lesser scale, the galactic nucleus is the site of a wide range of activity apparently powered by the black hole. Infrared radiation and X-rays are emitted from the area, and rapidly moving gas clouds can be observed there. Data strongly indicate that material is being pulled into the black hole from outside the nuclear region, including some gas from the z direction (i.e., perpendicular to the galactic plane). As the gas nears the black hole, its strong gravitational force squeezes the gas into a rapidly rotating disk, which extends outward about 5–30 light-years from the central object. Rotation measurements of the disk and the orbital motions of stars (seen at infrared wavelengths) indicate that the black hole has a mass 3,600,000 times that of the Sun.

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