 Here we have a black hole at the center of a dwarf galaxy, Einstein's 210, 30 million light years away. This galaxy contains only one-tenth the number of stars found in our milky way. What's unique here is that this black hole is located near a star-forming region, with an outflow of gas moving at about 1.6 million kilometers per hour, or 1 million miles per hour, towards the region. This flow is embedded with a large number of new stars. This is the opposite effect of what's seen in larger galaxies, with larger black holes, where material flowing away and into surrounding gas eats the gas to the point where new star formation is not possible.