A photo from open sources
Photos taken with the Hubble telescope and nuclear NuSTAR Spectroscopic Telescope from photographs that capture how two collide galaxies, in the “heart” of each of which are supermassive black holes. The pictures show two colliding galaxies, 134 million light-years distant from Earth. Their common name – Arp 299, writes Rossiyskaya Gazeta. The black hole of one of the galaxies grows due to absorption of gas clouds, the second hole either is at rest or hidden from telescopes. Received the results will help scientists understand how galaxy fusion can influence to black holes and what makes them actively absorb everything around. As FederalPress reported earlier, in early January, NASA astronomers recorded the largest release of matter from supermassive black holes in the center of our galaxy. X-ray flash was 400 times stronger than usual.
NASA Galaxy Black Hole Telescope