NASA captured mysterious X-rays from the universe's strongest 'beast'?

NASA's NuSTAR Nuclear Spectrometer has just captured mysterious light from the universe, a source of super-energy X-rays that baffles scientists.

The distant galaxy called Fireworks has been brought to the fore by the powerful supernova explosions, combined with the galaxy-like appearance of fireworks. But this time, it led scientists at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena (USA) to admit that they were confused: something very powerful and mysterious just happened at Fireworks .

The amazing phenomenon recorded by NASA's NuSTAR nuclear telescope telescope shows a terrible light explosion that occurred in the Fireworks galaxy, which, according to analysis by a team of researchers from the California Institute of Technology, is a Super energy X-ray source.

Picture 1 of NASA captured mysterious X-rays from the universe's strongest 'beast'?
A large bright area, "glorious and then dark," the green from the Fireworks galaxy confused scientists - (photo: NASA).

Strange phenomenon was discovered when scientists are attentively waiting for a star to explode into a supernova at Fireworks. But they received something much more violent than that. Unlike supernovas, it explodes very quickly and shuts down very quickly - wrapped up in just 10 days.

In the study just published in The Astrophysical Journal , the authors, led by Dr. Hannah Earnshaw, said the explosion of energy we can see with this green light could be related. concerning one of the most powerful "beasts" in the universe: an incredibly large supermassive black hole or an extremely powerful neutron star.

In it, they studied the neutron star theory. The neutron star is a super strong "corpse" of a once large and powerful star, having gravity billions of times stronger than the earth. In some cases, the wobble from the neutron star's wall may slow down its own rotation, enough for the cosmic debris to be caught in the star's halo of destruction just like a monster's black hole. devoured everything. That process could cause an energetic X-ray explosion to appear and disappear suddenly.

Scientists say they will continue to monitor the Fireworks galaxy to try to explain the origin and behavior of this "mysterious beast" . It is not excluded that another "beast" appears and provides interesting clues about a galaxy, perhaps more explosive and intense than our Milky Way.