Follow for more talkers

Supermassive black hole caught in act of cosmic destruction

A dramatic illustration of the event shows a disk of material that was created after a supermassive black hole tore apart a star.

Avatar photo

Published

on
This artist's impression shows the aftermath of a supermassive black hole having destroyed a star.
(NASA/CXC/Univ of Michigan/J. Miller/Weiss et al. via SWNS)

By Dean Murray via SWNS

A bully black hole has torn apart one star and has now set about a smaller black hole, according to space scientists.

NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes have identified a supermassive black hole causing cosmic destruction.

The new research is helping to connect two space mysteries and provides information about the environment around some of the bigger types of black holes.

It shows how the black hole is using the stellar wreckage of its first victim to "pummel another star or smaller black hole".

Artist impression of NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.
(NASA/CXC/SAO via SWNS)

A dramatic illustration of the event shows a disk of material that was created after a supermassive black hole tore apart a star through intense tidal forces.

Over the course of a few years, this disk expanded outward until it intersected with another object — either a star or a small black hole — that was also in orbit around the giant black hole.

Each time this object crashes into the disk, it sends out a burst of X-rays detected by Chandra.

(NASA/CXC/Univ of Michigan/J. Miller/Weiss et al. via SWNS)

In 2019, an optical telescope in California noticed a burst of light that astronomers later categorized as a “tidal disruption event”, or TDE. These are cases where black holes tear stars apart if they get too close through their powerful tidal forces.

Meanwhile, scientists were also tracking instances of another type of cosmic phenomena occasionally observed across the Universe. These were brief and regular bursts of X-rays that were near supermassive black holes. Astronomers named these events “quasi-periodic eruptions,” or QPEs.

This latest study gives scientists evidence that TDEs and QPEs are likely connected. The researchers think that QPEs arise when an object smashes into the disk left behind after the TDE. While there may be other explanations, the authors of the study propose this is the source of at least some QPEs.

The paper describing the results appears in the journal Nature this week.

Stories and infographics by ‘Talker Research’ are available & ready to use. Stories and videos by ‘Talker News’ are managed by Talker Inc. For queries, please submit an inquiry via our contact form.

Top Talkers