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NASA has recently confirmed the presence of a supermassive black hole at the center of the elliptical galaxy M87, weighing approximately 2.6 billion times that of the Sun. This groundbreaking discovery was made possible by images captured from the Hubble Space Telescope, which revealed the immense gravitational forces at play in the galaxy located 52 million light-years from Earth.
According to scientists, M87 is home to over 100 billion stars, yet its core houses a black hole that significantly distorts space and time, a phenomenon that many describe as a “door to hell.” The existence of such a colossal black hole has been theorized since 1978, but it remained unverified until recent analysis by astronomers including Tod Lauer, Sandra Faber, and Gary Linds.
Additionally, the galaxy exhibits a dramatic plasma jet extending thousands of light-years, fueled by the black hole's energy. The concentration of stars near M87's center is also remarkably high, dense enough to be 300 times greater than typical massive elliptical galaxies, indicating the black hole's strong gravitational influence.