The physicists produced a composite image of 170 giant black holes and discovered that the images were not as sharp as expected.
“Because space is filled with background radiation left over from the Big Bang, as well as emitted from galaxies, high-energy photons emitted by a distant source can interact with the background photons and convert into electron-positron pairs, which interact in their turn and convert back into a group of photons somewhat later,” said Kusenko, who is also a senior scientist at the University of Tokyo’s Institute for Physics and Mathematics of the Universe.
“While this process by itself does not blur the image significantly, even a small magnetic field along the way can deflect the electrons and positrons, making the image fuzzy,” he said.
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