NASA's the
Hubble Space Telescope and the European Space Agency, is one among the foremost trustworthy tools
for observing distant objects in space.
It’s been sending back stunning
images for over 29 years now, getting repairs and upgrades along the
way, and NASA has chosen a very lovely image from Hubble to shut out
2019.
This
galaxy has something referred to as a lively galactic nucleus. While
this phrase sounds complex, this simply means astronomers measure tons
of radiation in the least wavelengths coming from the middle of the
galaxy.
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This
radiation is generated by material falling inward into the very central
region of ESO 021-G004, and meeting the behemoth lurking there — a
supermassive region.
As
material falls toward this region it’s dragged into orbit as a part of
an accretion disk; it becomes super heated because it swirls around and
around, emitting characteristic high-energy radiation until it’s
eventually devoured.