Bonjour Je m'appelle Réal Joly AKA MagikUnicorn, je suis québécois d'origine canadienne j'habite la merveilleuse île de Montréal Forteresse Francophone d'Amérique.
Jeune j'étais déjà un mordu de l'Art. Dès l'âge de 12 ans je débutais le fusain pour poursuivre avec la sculpture et enfin la peinture...
Aujourd'hui après un cours de graphisme et l'experience acquise en vingt ans d'Art, je me redécouvre ! Assis devant mon écran d'ordinateur, je dessine avec des millions de polygones et de calculs mathématiques, et m'enivre de ce nouvel Art des temps modernes qu'est le dessin en 3D...  Merci à tous.
L'AMOUR ET L'ÉVOLUTION DE L'ART N'ONT PAS DE LIMITE
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Hi my name is Réal Joly AKA MagikUnicorn and I live on the marvelous french island of Montreal Quebec Canada
Young person I was already bitten of Art. As of the 12 years age I began the charcoal to continue with sculpture and finally painting... Today after a graphics study and the experience gained in twenty years of Art, I rediscover myself ! Sat in front of the screen of my computer, I draw with million polygons and mathematical calculations, and I get drunk of this New Art of modern times which is the 3D drawing... Thank you All.
LOVE AND EVOLUTION OF ART ARE UNLIMITED
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MY FACEGATE ;-)
https://www.facebook.com/MagikUnicorn
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Comments (18)
MagikUnicorn
.............The new data support the "lamppost" model -- and demonstrate, in the finest detail yet, how the light-bulb-like coronas move. The observations began when Swift, which monitors the sky for cosmic outbursts of X-rays and gamma rays, caught a large flare coming from the supermassive black hole called Markarian 335, or Mrk 335, located 324 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Pegasus. This supermassive black hole, which sits at the center of a galaxy, was once one of the brightest X-ray sources in the sky.
"Something very strange happened in 2007, when Mrk 335 faded by a factor of 30. What we have found is that it continues to erupt in flares but has not reached the brightness levels and stability seen before," said Luigi Gallo, the principal investigator for the project at Saint Mary's University. Another co-author, Dirk Grupe of Morehead State University in Kentucky, has been using Swift to regularly monitor the black hole since 2007.
In September 2014, Swift caught Mrk 335 in a huge flare. Once Gallo found out, he sent a request to the NuSTAR team to quickly follow up on the object as part of a "target of opportunity" program, where the observatory's previously planned observing schedule is interrupted for important events. Eight days later, NuSTAR set its X-ray eyes on the target, witnessing the final half of the flare event.
After careful scrutiny of the data, the astronomers realized they were seeing the ejection, and eventual collapse, of the black hole's corona.
"The corona gathered inward at first and then launched upwards like a jet," said Wilkins. "We still don't know how jets in black holes form, but it's an exciting possibility that this black hole's corona was beginning to form the base of a jet before it collapsed."
How could the researchers tell the corona moved? The corona gives off X-ray light that has a slightly different spectrum -- X-ray "colors" -- than the light coming from the disk around the black hole. By analyzing a spectrum of X-ray light from Mrk 335 across a range of wavelengths observed by both Swift and NuSTAR, the researchers could tell that the corona X-ray light had brightened -- and that this brightening was due to the motion of the corona.
Coronas can move very fast. The corona associated with Mrk 335, according to the scientists, was traveling at about 20 percent the speed of light. When this happens, and the corona launches in our direction, its light is brightened in an effect called relativistic Doppler boosting.
Putting this all together, the results show that the X-ray flare from this black hole was caused by the ejected corona.
"The nature of the energetic source of X-rays we call the corona is mysterious, but now with the ability to see dramatic changes like this we are getting clues about its size and structure," said Fiona Harrison, the principal investigator of NuSTAR at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, who was not affiliated with the study.
Many other black hole brainteasers remain. For example, astronomers want to understand what causes the ejection of the corona in the first place.
Richardphotos
outstanding spatial odyssey
GrandmaT
Stunning image and information! Thank you for both.
eekdog
Great info and design of the black hole.
daggerwilldo
A fine explanation and visualization of a most interesting topic. very nicely done.
BryceHoro
Great depiction of a black hole and interesting info.
Leije
Superbe et merci pour les infos !
jmb007
beau travail real
flavia49
marvelous picture
miwi
Stunning image and information! Thanks you for both.
DennisReed
cool
jendellas
Very interesting, space is a mystery. x
Cyve
Outstandingly done Cousin !!!
QuietRiot
That's a lot to digest....and very interesting! Love the way you illustrated it.
RodS
Black holes are such 'odd ducks' of the universe.... Nothing can escape their gravitational even horizon, and yet they project streams of energetic particles, x-rays and even light in some cases. Strange things, indeed.. Doorways to another universe??
Excellent work, Real!
UteBigSmile
Looks simply great!!!!
drifterlee
Very cool black hole, Magik!
Glendaw
Awesome background information and stunning visual Magik.
As always it looks so realistic, great job ! !