SS 433: A black hole & massive binary star system about 16,000 light years from Earth.
Caption: The lobes of hot gas
observed on either side of the black hole (shown in the
illustration, lower right) are due to the pileup of blobs of hot
gas ejected at a quarter of the speed of light from the vicinity
of the black hole. Material is ejected from this disk in narrow jets that slowly wobble or precess around a circle (represented by blue circular arrow), from the sketched location of the jet at one extreme to the dotted white line at another. As the material slows down, it gets rear-ended by other blobs. This high-speed collision produces the lobes of hot gas.
Scale: Image is 6.5 arcsec across
Chandra X-ray Observatory ACIS
Image
CXC operated for
NASA by the Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory
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