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NASA's Hubble captured a rare event 600 million light-years away: a black hole devouring a star in a Tidal Disruption Event ...
Astronomers have observed a tidal disruption event, AT2024tvd, revealing a rogue supermassive black hole devouring a star far ...
Among the events it can identify are tidal disruption events, where a star gets spaghettified by the enormous gravity of a ...
Using the Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) onboard the International Space Station (ISS), astronomers have ...
NASA has captured the astronomical event, called a Tidal Disruption Event (TDE), using its Hubble Space Telescope.
Despite weighing about a million times the mass of our sun, the black hole wasn't found at the center of its host galaxy, ...
Like a scene out of a sci-fi movie, astronomers using NASA telescopes have found "Space Jaws." Lurking 600 million ...
Dubbed AT2024tvd, the burst of radiation from this " tidal disruption event " (TDE) was also picked up by NASA's Chandra ...
Black holes are the hungry monsters of the cosmos: enormously dense objects that can suck in any material which strays too close and then devour it. Now, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope ...
The star-snacking black hole gave itself away when several ground-based sky survey telescopes observed a flare as bright as a ...
Located around 600 million light-years from Earth, the black hole sat quietly in the dark space between stars.
What can wandering black holes teach scientists about the formation and evolution of black holes throughout the universe?