One of the most powerful eruptions from a black hole ever recorded has been discovered by an international team of astronomers.
The mega-explosion, which took place billions of years ago, may help explain the formation of a pattern of star clusters resembling beads on a string, according to the study.
This stellar jewelry is located in SDSS J1531, a massive galaxy cluster 3.8 billion light-years from Earth, containing hundreds of individual galaxies and a huge reservoir of hot gas and dark matter.
At the heart of SDSS J1531, two of the cluster’s largest galaxies are colliding with one another.
These colliding giants are surrounded by a set of 19 large clusters of stars, called superclusters, arranged in an ‘S’ formation that resembles a string of beads.
The team used a combination of X-ray, radio, and optical data to understand how this unusual chain of star clusters formed.








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