Contact: Norbert Schartel
norbert.schartel@esa.int
34-918-131-184
European Space Agency
Caption: Artist's impression of a rare type of quasar, called a broad absorption line (BAL) quasar. Quasars are vast cosmic engines that pump energy into their surroundings. It is thought an enormous black hole drives each quasar. XMM-Newton has been surprised by a BAL quasar from which it has detected a higher number of X-rays than thought possible. The observation gives new insight into the powerful processes shaping galaxies during their formation and evolution. About 10-20 percent of all quasars are BAL quasars, which get their name from a thick cocoon of gas surrounding the quasar. Most researchers believe that gas flows away from a BAL quasar along the equatorial direction of the accretion disc. These quasars show little X-ray emission, indicating that there is enough gas to absorb most of the X-rays given out from the region near the black hole. But as discovered with XMM-Newton, some BAL quasars appear to be spewing material out along their polar axes, at right angles to the accretion discs.
Credit: ESA (Image by C. Carreau)
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