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Hubble Space Image - GRB 110328A (captured by the Hubble Space Telescope)

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Summary

NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has pinpointed the source of one of the most puzzling blasts of high-energy radiation ever observed. It is at the very center of a small, distant galaxy, which appears to be sending a beam of radiation directly toward Earth.

The 3.8-billion-light-year-distant galaxy appears as a bright blob at the center of the Hubble picture.

This observation may support the idea that a supermassive black hole at the core of the galaxy has gravitationally torn apart and swallowed a bypassing star. As the star's gas falls onto the black hole, radiation is ejected along a narrow beam.

On March 28, 2011, NASA's Swift satellite, which looks for transient X-rays and gamma rays, detected the first of a string of powerful bursts of high-energy radiation that has lasted for a week.

More Hubble observations are planned to see if the core changes brightness. An armada of ground- and space-based telescopes is also watching the object from X-ray through radio wavelengths. The Hubble observations were taken in visible and near-infrared light on April 4, 2011, with the Wide Field Camera 3. This Hubble image was taken in visible light.

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hubble images hubble space telescope space impacts astronomy gamma ray bursts nasa
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Date

1990 - 2020
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Source

Hubble Space Telescope NASA
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Link

http://commons.wikimedia.org/
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Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Gamma Ray Bursts, Space Impacts, Hubble Images

Topics

hubble images hubble space telescope space impacts astronomy gamma ray bursts nasa