HomeScienceNASA and ISRO's AstroSat capture a black hole ripping apart a star and now targeting another one

NASA and ISRO's AstroSat capture a black hole ripping apart a star and now targeting another one

Astronomers witness massive black hole tearing apart star, causing X-ray bursts as remains collide with nearby star

October 11, 2024 / 17:12 IST
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In 2019, scientists witnessed a star getting too close to a black hole. (Image: NASA/ISRO)
In 2019, scientists witnessed a star getting too close to a black hole. (Image: NASA/ISRO)

Astronomers have made an exciting discovery in space. A massive black hole has torn apart a star, using its remains to bombard another star or smaller black hole nearby. This breakthrough came from observations by NASA’s Chandra, Hubble, NICER, Swift, and ISRO’s AstroSat.

In 2019, scientists witnessed a star getting too close to a black hole. The black hole's strong gravitational forces shredded the star, leaving its remains in a disk. This disk has now expanded and is colliding with an orbiting star about every 48 hours.

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Matt Nicholl from Queen’s University Belfast explained the phenomenon. He likened the orbiting star to a diver making a splash in a pool. Each time the star crashes into the debris, it creates bursts of X-rays.

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