Yes. You see, a supermassive blackhole constantly eats away at the galaxy it inhabits. but for clusters the gravitational field is so immense, it already is pulling whole galaxies into its singularity. An example could be that our galaxy, as well as others are being pulled to a phenomenon known as The Great Attraction which could very well be a supermassive black hole.
Most galaxies - the larger ones at least - have a supermassive black holes in their center.
every galaxy got a black hole in the center even our galaxy, the milky way.
A blazar is an elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole at the center.
Astronomers have detected a quasar in a distant galaxy.
supermassive
A quasi-stellar radio source (quasar) is a powerfully energetic and distant galaxy with an active galactic nucleus which most probably houses a supermassive black hole.Not quite. A quasar is believed to be a disk of superheated matter that is about to fall into a supermassive black hole.
At the center of every galaxy is a supermassive black hole.
At the center of every galaxy is a supermassive black hole.
The Supermassive Black Hole at the centre.
It seems that just about EVERY galaxy has a huge ("supermassive") black hole in its center.
A supermassive black hole.
The most luminous and distant objects known to science are called quasars and generally accepted to be the nuclei of active galaxies, or in other words supermassive black holes with their relativistic polar jets aimed towards earth.