With
very-long-baseline interferometry, the fine detail of
radio waves can be seen down to
milliarcsecond (mas) resolution. A central very bright single point called the
core is observed. From the core an extremely high-speed blast of plasma emerges in a narrow cone shape as a
one-sided jet. After 30 milliarcseconds, the jet, which is 300 pc long, does a 90° turn and fans out. The inner jet before the kink shows bright edges or a limb-brightened structure less than 10 mas wide. This is probably due to a fast-moving central part to the jet, combined with slower edges. Normally, there would be jets of gas shooting out in opposite directions. The observed jet is the one that faces the earth and projects plasma towards Earth. There is also a jet heading away from Earth called a
counter jet. Close into the core, this counter jet is so much dimmer than the main jet that it is invisible in radio waves. The brightness of the counter jet is less than the main jet by a factor of 1250. This implies that the jet is
relativistic with
Γ about 15 (that is, the plasma is moving at 99.8% of the speed of light) and at an angle between 15° and 25° from the line of sight from the Earth. At 408 MHz, the power level is 1.81
Jy, although this is variable.{{cite web|url=http://cdsweb.cern.ch/record/641783/files/0309285.pdf|title=Parsec Scale Properties of Markarian 501 Beyond 10 kpc from the core, the counter jet becomes visible, showing that the jets have become non-relativistic; that is, plasma is no longer moving close to the speed of light. The symmetrical radio emission extends to 70", which corresponds to 120 to 200 kpc. ==Blazar research==