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There's something really weird in the centre of the Milky Way.
The vicinity of a supermassive black hole is a pretty weird place to start with, but astronomers have found six objects orbiting Sagittarius A* that are unlike anything in the galaxy. They are so peculiar that they have been assigned a brand-new class - what astronomers are calling G objects.
The original two objects - named G1 and G2 - first caught the eye of astronomers nearly two decades ago, with their orbits and odd natures gradually pieced together over subsequent years. They seemed to be giant gas clouds 100 astronomical units across, stretching out longer when they got close to the black hole, with gas and dust emission spectra.
But G1 and G2 weren't behaving like gas clouds.
"These objects look like gas but behave like stars," said physicist and astronomer Andrea Ghez of the University of California, Los Angeles.
originally posted by: Ophiuchus 13
Theorizing with the minds Eye-Third eye.
If you considered the burn off materials from all Stars within the Milkyway as like shedding from stars, theoretically if those shedded materials collected into less dense forms they may be responsible for the G objects.
Speculation ofcourse 🤔
What does your minds Eye-Third eye see/sense if anything?
If you considered the burn off materials from all Stars within the Milkyway as like shedding from stars, theoretically if those shedded materials collected into less dense forms they may be responsible for the G objects.
originally posted by: Ophiuchus 13
Theorizing with the minds Eye-Third eye.
If you considered the burn off materials from all Stars within the Milkyway as like shedding from stars, theoretically if those shedded materials collected into less dense forms they may be responsible for the G objects.
Speculation ofcourse 🤔
What does your minds Eye-Third eye see/sense if anything?
The gas clouds are from the black hole at the center of the galaxy (which birthed the galaxy with matter to begin with) burping # out at some point millions or billions of years ago that collected and are trapped in a gravity based orbit around it.
originally posted by: Quantumgamer1776
a reply to: FlyingSquirrel
The gas clouds are from the black hole at the center of the galaxy (which birthed the galaxy with matter to begin with) burping # out at some point millions or billions of years ago that collected and are trapped in a gravity based orbit around it.
Black holes don’t “burp out” matter and form galaxies around them, nothing escapes black holes like that. The matter coalesces around the black hole due to its extreme gravity and eventually forms a galaxy. Not sure where you got the idea that black holes periodically expel large amounts of matter to create galaxies around them selves
originally posted by: Alien Abduct
a reply to: Ophiuchus 13
If you considered the burn off materials from all Stars within the Milkyway as like shedding from stars, theoretically if those shedded materials collected into less dense forms they may be responsible for the G objects.
If an object as dense as a star has "burn off material" that could collect together (assuming under the force of gravity) that is less dense as the star itself then how could that glob of supposed burn off material be even mistaken as anything remotely considered an "object"?
I digress.
So they think the objects may be binary star mergers but aren't really sure, interesting.
originally posted by: Ophiuchus 13
www.google.com...
originally posted by: FlyingSquirrel
Then again, everyone into these observations seems to forget that they're looking at really old data because of the distance, like looking back in time, and there's no telling what's currently going on in real time there.