‘Ice cube’ clouds discovered at the galaxy’s center shouldn’t exist — and they hint at a recent black hole explosion

Two of the strangest structures in the galaxy just got even stranger.

Ballooning above and below the Milky Way’s center like a massive hourglass, the mysterious Fermi bubbles loom large over our galaxy. These enormous twin orbs of superheated plasma have been gushing out of the galactic center for millions of years. Today, they span some 50,000 light-years from tip to tip, collectively making them half as tall as the Milky Way is long.

Now, scientists studying the perplexing bubbles with the U.S. National Science Foundation Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia have discovered something shocking: Nestled deep within the superhot bubbles are gargantuan clouds of cold hydrogen gas that have inexplicably survived in an extreme environment.

An illustration of the cold hydrogen clouds nested within the Fermi Bubbles. (Image credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/P.Vosteen)

According to the researchers, these bewildering clouds are likely the remnants of much larger structures that puffed out of the galaxy’s center several million years ago.

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