A Hubble Space Telescope visible-light image of the galaxy MCG-03-34-064. Hubble’s sharp view reveals three distinct bright spots embedded in a white ellipse at the galaxy’s center (expanded in an inset image at upper right). Two of these bright spots are the source of strong X-ray emission, a telltale sign that they are supermassive black holes. The black holes shine brightly because they are converting infalling matter into energy, and blaze across space as active galactic nuclei. Their separation is about 300 light-years. The third spot is a blob of bright gas. The blue streak pointing to the 5 o’clock position may be a jet fired from one of the black holes. The black hole pair is a result of a merger between two galaxies that will eventually collide. Credit: NASA, ESA, Anna Trindade Falcão (CfA), Joseph DePasquale (STScI) see also: https://draft.blogger.com/blog/posts/21850084
The third hotspot, seems to representb the (Q-FFF Theory based : "White Hole"in between two equal sized Herbig Haro black Holes.) The White Hole location i assumed to be the second start of the plasma Jet