WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.183 Our Milky Way’s central black hole has a leak! 2 00:00:04.183 --> 00:00:09.383 This supermassive black hole, over 4 million times more massive than our Sun, 3 00:00:09.383 --> 00:00:12.200 looks like it still has the remnants of a blowtorch-like 4 00:00:12.200 --> 00:00:15.208 jet dating back several thousand years. 5 00:00:15.208 --> 00:00:19.479 NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope hasn’t photographed the phantom jet yet, 6 00:00:19.479 --> 00:00:22.970 but it has helped find circumstantial evidence that the jet is still 7 00:00:22.970 --> 00:00:26.750 pushing feebly into a huge hydrogen cloud. 8 00:00:26.750 --> 00:00:31.410 This is further evidence that the black hole is not a sleeping monster, but periodically 9 00:00:31.410 --> 00:00:37.870 hiccups as stars and gas clouds fall into it. The hiccup results in superheated material 10 00:00:37.870 --> 00:00:43.589 blasting away from the black hole as narrow beams, or jets, shooting in the same direction 11 00:00:43.589 --> 00:00:49.500 as the black hole’s spin axis along with a flood of ionizing radiation. 12 00:00:49.500 --> 00:00:55.199 As the jet blows through the gas, it hits material, which creates a series of expanding 13 00:00:55.199 --> 00:00:59.646 bubbles that extend out to at least 500 light-years. 14 00:00:59.646 --> 00:01:01.879 The streams continue to percolate out of the 15 00:01:01.879 --> 00:01:06.869 Milky Way’s dense gas disk into the galactic halo. 16 00:01:06.869 --> 00:01:11.960 Scientists concluded that this black hole clearly surged in brightness by as much as 17 00:01:11.960 --> 00:01:17.630 1 millionfold in the last million years. That would be enough for a jet to punch into the 18 00:01:17.630 --> 00:01:20.833 halo of material that surrounds the galaxy. 19 00:01:20.833 --> 00:01:25.049 This Hubble image of Galaxy NGC 1068, shows 20 00:01:25.049 --> 00:01:28.920 a similar scenario occurring. 21 00:01:28.920 --> 00:01:34.000 Previous observations by Hubble and other telescopes found evidence that the Milky Way’s 22 00:01:34.000 --> 00:01:39.369 black hole had an outburst about 2-4 million years ago that was energetic enough to create 23 00:01:39.369 --> 00:01:44.509 an immense pair of bubbles towering above our galaxy that glow in gamma-rays. 24 00:01:44.509 --> 00:01:49.710 Hubble was used to see how fast the bubbles were expanding and what they were made of. 25 00:01:49.710 --> 00:01:54.950 Hubble later found that the burst was so powerful that it lit up a gaseous structure as far 26 00:01:54.950 --> 00:01:59.449 away as 200,000 light-years from the galactic center. 27 00:01:59.449 --> 00:02:02.549 Called the Magellanic stream, seen here in pink, 28 00:02:02.549 --> 00:02:06.600 this gas is still glowing from that event even today. 29 00:02:06.600 --> 00:02:11.140 The residual jet feature is close enough to the black hole that it would become much more 30 00:02:11.140 --> 00:02:16.411 prominent only a few decades after the Milky Way’s black hole powers up again. 31 00:02:16.411 --> 00:02:22.114 Whenever that does actually end up happening, it’s sure to be quite a spectacular show! 32 00:02:22.114 --> 00:02:28.982 [ MUSIC ]