From: Damien Broderick (d.broderick@english.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Sat Jan 15 2000 - 04:20:07 MST
At 10:51 PM 14/01/00 -0800, gene wrote:
>
>I wonder what it means for local hole density. How many lightyears is
>it to the next on the average?
EurekAlert has various items from Chandra this week. Two look faintly like
they might excite Robert Bradbury: both the Milky Way's and Andromeda's
core superholes look too faint or small. Maybe they're being used/cloaked
by M-Brains. (But if so, why not use the lot?)
e.g.
Research News Release: 14 January
2000
American Astronomical Society
Winter Meeting, Atlanta
Chandra finds a 'cool'
black hole at the heart of
the Andromeda Galaxy
In its first look at the Andromeda
Galaxy (M31), NASA's Chandra
X-ray Observatory has found that
the gas funneling into a
supermassive black hole in the
heart of this galaxy is a "cool"
million degrees. This unexpected
result adds one more quirk to the
strange behavior previously
observed at the center of M31.
NASA
==================
Damien Broderick
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