MUSE spies accreting giant structure around a quasar
This Picture of the Week shows a huge cloud of gas around the distant quasar SDSS J102009.99+104002.7, taken by the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal Observatory. Quasars are the luminous centres of active galaxies, which are kept active by material falling onto the central supermassive black hole. This quasar and its surrounding cloud are at a redshift larger than 3, meaning that they are seen as they were only about 2 billion years after the Big Bang.
The cloud of gas (or nebula) surrounding the quasar is known to astronomers as an Enormous Lyman-Alpha Nebula (ELAN). These types of nebula are massive structures of gas which formed in the early Universe, and they can help astronomers to learn how angular momentum — which explains the observed rotation of more recent galaxies — was created in the Universe. Thanks to the revolutionary MUSE instrument, it is now possible to observe these rare giant nebulae in greater detail than ever before.
This particular ELAN has a diameter of about a million light-years, and MUSE’s spectral imaging capabilities have allowed astronomers to measure the signature of inspiraling motions within the nebula — for the first time ever.
Link
Credit:ESO/Arrigoni Battaia et al.
About the Image
Id: | potw1747a |
Type: | Observation |
Release date: | 20 November 2017, 06:00 |
Size: | 614 x 656 px |
About the Object
Name: | SDSS J102009.99+104002.7 |
Type: | Early Universe : Galaxy : Activity : AGN : Quasar |
Distance: | z=3.164 (redshift) |
Constellation: | Leo |
Category: | Quasars and Black Holes |
Wallpapers
Coordinates
Position (RA): | 10 20 9.39 |
Position (Dec): | 10° 40' 3.25" |
Field of view: | 1.02 x 1.09 arcminutes |
Orientation: | North is 0.0° left of vertical |
Colours & filters
Band | Wavelength | Telescope |
---|---|---|
Optical Ly-α | 121 nm | Very Large Telescope MUSE |
Optical Continuum | 540 nm | Very Large Telescope MUSE |
Optical Continuum | 823 nm | Very Large Telescope MUSE |