A team of astronomers studying RBS 797 think the most likely answer is that the galaxy cluster contains a pair of supermassive black holes, each of which has launched jets in perpendicular directions at almost the same time. Another possible explanation for the four cavities seen in RBS 797 is that there is only one supermassive black hole — with jets that somehow manage to flip around in direction quite quickly. Analysis of the Chandra data shows that the age difference for the east-west and north-south cavities is less than 10 million years.
Previously, astronomers observed the pair of cavities in the east-west direction in RBS 797, but the pair in the north-south direction was only detected in a new, much longer Chandra observation. The deeper image uses almost five days of Chandra observing time, compared to about 14 hours for the original observation. The NSF's Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array had already observed evidence for two pairs of jets as radio emission, which line up with the cavities.
A paper describing these results, led by Francesco Ubertosi (University of Bologna in Italy) appears in The Astrophysical Journal Letters as is available online: https://arxiv.org/abs/2111.03679 The other authors include Myriam Gitti (Univ. of Bologna), Fabrizio Brighenti (Univ. of Bologna), Gianfranco Brunetti (INAF), Michael McDonald (Massachusetts Insitute of Technology), Paul Nulsen (Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian), Brian McNamara (Perimeter Institute), Scott Randall (CfA), William Forman (CfA), Megan Donahue (Michigan State University), Alessandro Ignesti (INAF), Massimo Gaspari (INAF), Steffano Ettori (INAF), Luigina Feretti (INAF), Elizabeth L. Blanton (Boston University), Christine Jones (CfA), and Michael S. Calzadilla (MIT).
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls
science from Cambridge Massachusetts and flight operations from
Burlington, Massachusetts.
Fast Facts for RBS 797:
Scale: X-ray & optical images are about 1 arcmin (1.1 million light years) across.
Category: Groups & Clusters of Galaxies, Black Holes
Constellation: Draco
Observation Date: 13 pointings between May 24, 2020 and Dec 6, 2020
Observation Time: 113 hours 33 minutes (4 days, 17 hours, 33 minutes)
Obs. ID: 22636-22638, 22931-22935, 23332, 24631-24632, 24852, 24865
Instrument: ACIS
References: Ubertosi, F. et al, 2021. ApJL paper
Color Code: X-ray: blue; Optical: orange and blue
Distance Estimate: About 3.9 billion light years (z=0.354)