Math, asked by Anonymous, 2 months ago

What Is The Centre Of Galaxy...

Answers

Answered by NeilChoraria
3

Answer:

The Galactic Center (or Galactic Centre) is the rotational center of the Milky Way galaxy; it is a supermassive black hole of 4.100 ± 0.034 million solar masses, which powers the compact radio source Sagittarius A*.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] It is 8.178 ± 0.035 kiloparsecs (26,670 ± 110 ly) away from Earth[8] in the direction of the constellations Sagittarius, Ophiuchus, and Scorpius where the Milky Way appears brightest.

There are around 10 million stars within one parsec of the Galactic Center, dominated by red giants, with a significant population of massive supergiants and Wolf-Rayet stars from star formation in the region around 1 million years ago.

Hope it helps you.

Please mark me as brainliest.

Have a great day ahead.

Bye.

Answered by Hαrsh
57

 {\huge {\purple {\mathcal {\underbrace {AnSwer♡࿐}}}}}

The center of the Milky Way, roughly the inner 10,000 light-years, consists of the region where the galaxy's spiral arm structure has broken down and transformed into a “bulge” of stars. At its heart—and the dominant force in that area of the galaxy—is a 1 million-solar-mass black hole named Sagittarius A*.


srinuvasukaribandi: thanks for your answer
Similar questions