Radio observations find nothing at Omega Centauri’s heart

Omega Centauri dominates the southern sky as the Milky Way’s largest and brightest globular cluster, a dense sphere containing roughly 10 million stars. Earlier this year, astronomers found evidence that an intermediate mass black hole hides within the cluster’s core, revealed by seven stars moving far too quickly to remain bound unless something massive holds them gravitationally. Now, researchers have searched for the black hole itself using radio telescopes, and their discovery is what they didn’t find.

This post was originally published on this site

Skip The Dishes Referral Code

Lawyers Lookup - Find A Lawyer Who Speaks Your Language

Public Mobile Promo Codes