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Best gifts for men: 60+ awesome options for every type of guy

Traditional male stereotypes are a thing of the past, y’all, and it’s time we started embracing that fact when we’re looking for gifts. No two guys are the same, and not every man spends their days dreaming of whiskey stones — despite what most other gift guides for men would lead you to believe. Instead, the best gifts for men should make the guy you’re gifting to feel seen. They should make him feel like you truly get him. Before you click “buy” on something that will definitely require a gift receipt, let us take the wheel and show you some gift ideas for men that are sure to make an impression on your lucky guy — whether it’s Father’s Day, Valentine’s Day, birthdays, holidays, or something else. And if you need even more gift ideas, check out these gifts for the father figure in your life, or these if you’re shopping for your boyfriend.
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The Milky Ways black hole may have formed this curious tunnel in space
Suddenly, the Milky Way’s central black hole is starting to look a little less like a weirdo.
Astronomers have discovered a large cone-shaped void in gas surrounding Sagittarius A*, the galaxy’s supermassive black hole, that could solve a longstanding mystery.
All active black holes should blow winds or jets of material back into space while they’re feeding, according to theory. That process is how supermassive black holes shape the galaxies around them. But no matter how hard astronomers have looked, they haven’t seen our black hole, dubbed Sgr A* for short, pushing anything back out.
New images from a Northwestern University-led research team now suggest this cone tunneling through a fog of cold gas is evidence of that missing wind. It was almost literally an arrow pointing back at the black hole, said Mark Gorski, who co-led the study.
“This is the first time we’ve had a clean enough view to see the wind’s imprint,” Gorski said in a statement. “We looked at the data and said, ‘There it is. There is the thing that everybody’s been looking for for 50 years.'”
In reality, the discovery wasn’t that straightforward of an a-ha moment. Only after the team had overlaid their picture with data from NASA‘s Chandra X-ray Observatory did their observations begin to make sense. That gave them confidence the odd cone wasn’t just an imaging artifact, they said.
“When you find something that no one has seen before, the first thought that runs through your mind is not ‘Oh my God, we made a discovery,'” said coauthor Elena Murchikova, in a statement. “It’s ‘Oh my God, what’s wrong with my analysis?'”
Mashable Light Speed

Astronomers combined radio and X-ray data from the ALMA and Chandra-X telescopes to study the cone-shaped void near the Milky Way’s central black hole.
Credit: NASA / CXC / Northwestern / M. Gorski / ESO / NAOJ / NRAO / ALMA / K. Arcand and P. Edmonds
Scientists believe virtually all large galaxies have a supermassive black hole at their core. These are regions millions to billions of times more massive than the sun. In fact, so much mass is packed into these small spaces that gravity becomes strong enough to prevent anything from escaping — even light.
These black holes don’t just sit around, waiting for gas, dust, and stars to fall in, but they influence how their galaxies evolve around them by sucking in material and also blowing material that comes near their boundary — called the event horizon — back out.
By taking high-resolution observations with Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array in Chile over about five years, the team was able to map cold gas near the black hole in unprecedented detail. This ALMA image is 100 times deeper and 80 times sharper than previous maps, according to the researchers.
The cone stretches one to three light-years away from the black hole. The simplest explanation after careful consideration, according to the team’s findings published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, is that a fast, energetic stream of hot material has launched out of the black hole’s region, shoving colder gas in its path out of the way.

The ALMA radio telescopes in Chile spent five years observing the Milky Way’s central region to create high-resolution maps of surrounding cold gas.
Credit: ALMA /S. Longmore et al. / ESO / D. Minniti et al.
The team determined it would take more energy than could be provided by all the stars in that area to create the conic gap. The researchers estimated the wind has probably been blowing for 20,000 years or more.
Based on the image, the direction of Sgr A*’s wind seems somewhat tilted and uneven, which suggests it may be weak and mangled by surrounding gas as it travels.
How this feature has escaped the notice of previous researchers is not too surprising, the researchers said. In order to see into our own galaxy’s center, astronomers have to look through the plane of the Milky Way, which is thick with gas, dust, and ionized structures. Sgr A* may also be in a quieter lull, making the distant activity harder to spot.
Some scientists have previously suggested that the lack of wind or jets could mean Sgr A* is an exotic black hole — an outlier among hundreds of billions of others like it. If anything, Murchikova is now convinced of the opposite.
“It shows that our black hole is not unique, and our place in the universe is not unique,” she said.
