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Black Hole swallows star

scarletandgrey

Cleverly disguised as a responsible adult!
NASA telescope sees black hole gulping remote star
By Will DunhamTue Dec 5, 7:18 PM ET



A giant black hole displaying horrifying table manners has been caught in the act of guzzling a star in a galaxy 4 billion light-years away, scientists using an orbiting NASA telescope said on Tuesday.
For the past two years, scientists have monitored the dramatic events as the star, residing in a galaxy in the Bootes constellation, was ripped apart by the black hole.

Scientists used NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer, an orbiting telescope sensitive to two bands of ultraviolet wave lengths, to detect an ultraviolet flare coming from the center of a remote elliptical galaxy.

"This ultraviolet flare was from a star literally being ripped apart and swallowed by the black hole," Suvi Gezari of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and lead author of the paper describing the findings in Astrophysical Journal Letters, said in an interview.

"This is the first time that we've actually been able to monitor the flare of radiation from such an event in detail. Only once every 10,000 years will a star pass close enough to a (galaxy's) central black hole to be ripped apart and swallowed in this manner," Gezari said.

The scientists hope the findings will give them a better understanding of black holes, objects whose gravity is so powerful even light cannot escape.
It is believed that super-massive black holes are located at the core of every galaxy. For example, Gezari said, the Milky Way galaxy in which our solar system resides has a dormant super-massive black hole at its center.
Scientists said in this case the unfortunate star strayed a bit too close to the black hole deep inside the galaxy, and was mutilated by the force of its gravity. They believe that parts of the star swirled around and then plunged into the black hole, which sent out the bright ultraviolet flare that the satellite detected.

Scientists continue to use the telescope to observe the ultraviolet light as it fades while the black hole snacks on the final table scraps from the devoured star.
"We looked at the galaxy in 2003 and there was no ultraviolet light coming from the galaxy at all," Gezari said. "And then in 2004, we suddenly saw this very bright source."

"The only way to explain such a luminous ultraviolet flare is if the black hole swallowed a star," Gezari said.

Caltech leads the Galaxy Evolution Explorer mission and is responsible for science operations and data analysis, while NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the mission and built the instrument.

The scientists also used data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Canada France Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii and the Keck Telescope in Hawaii. NASA telescope sees black hole gulping remote star
By Will DunhamTue Dec 5, 7:18 PM ET



A giant black hole displaying horrifying table manners has been caught in the act of guzzling a star in a galaxy 4 billion light-years away, scientists using an orbiting NASA telescope said on Tuesday.
For the past two years, scientists have monitored the dramatic events as the star, residing in a galaxy in the Bootes constellation, was ripped apart by the black hole.

Scientists used NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer, an orbiting telescope sensitive to two bands of ultraviolet wave lengths, to detect an ultraviolet flare coming from the center of a remote elliptical galaxy.

"This ultraviolet flare was from a star literally being ripped apart and swallowed by the black hole," Suvi Gezari of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena and lead author of the paper describing the findings in Astrophysical Journal Letters, said in an interview.

"This is the first time that we've actually been able to monitor the flare of radiation from such an event in detail. Only once every 10,000 years will a star pass close enough to a (galaxy's) central black hole to be ripped apart and swallowed in this manner," Gezari said.

The scientists hope the findings will give them a better understanding of black holes, objects whose gravity is so powerful even light cannot escape.
It is believed that super-massive black holes are located at the core of every galaxy. For example, Gezari said, the Milky Way galaxy in which our solar system resides has a dormant super-massive black hole at its center.
Scientists said in this case the unfortunate star strayed a bit too close to the black hole deep inside the galaxy, and was mutilated by the force of its gravity. They believe that parts of the star swirled around and then plunged into the black hole, which sent out the bright ultraviolet flare that the satellite detected.

Scientists continue to use the telescope to observe the ultraviolet light as it fades while the black hole snacks on the final table scraps from the devoured star.

"We looked at the galaxy in 2003 and there was no ultraviolet light coming from the galaxy at all," Gezari said. "And then in 2004, we suddenly saw this very bright source."

"The only way to explain such a luminous ultraviolet flare is if the black hole swallowed a star," Gezari said.

Caltech leads the Galaxy Evolution Explorer mission and is responsible for science operations and data analysis, while NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the mission and built the instrument.
The scientists also used data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Canada France Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii and the Keck Telescope in Hawaii.

Wow I find this to be a little un-nerving what if ours decides not to be dormant anymore? Will we all end up in the twilight zone?
 
2006_12_06t021548_450x300_us_blackhole.jpg

Burp
 
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scarletandgrey;680341; said:
"It is believed that super-massive black holes are located at the core of every galaxy. For example, Gezari said, the Milky Way galaxy in which our solar system resides has a dormant super-massive black hole at its center."

...

Wow I find this to be a little un-nerving what if ours decides not to be dormant anymore? Will we all end up in the twilight zone?

Even a supermassive black hole many millions of times the mass of our Sun has a limited gravitational "reach," so to speak -- and they're rather small in the grand scheme of things when you're talking about a galactic scale (the Milky Way is estimated to be some 100,000 light-years across).

In order for the Sun (or our solar system) to befall a similar fate, we'd have to be much, much, much closer to it. For us to experience disastrous effects, the black hole would have to be within a few hundred AU (1 Astronomical Unit, or AU = the distance between the Earth and the Sun, approximately 93,000,000 miles). It's a little difficult to visualize these monstrous expanses of space, but suffice to say that the distance I'm trying to describe is a tiny fraction of a light year (1/200th or so, give or take). Since we reside a comfy 26,000 light years from the galactic center, we're simply too far away to be affected.
 
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WolverineTX;680410; said:
Even a supermassive black hole many millions of times the mass of our Sun has a limited gravitational "reach," so to speak -- and they're rather small in the grand scheme of things when you're talking about a galactic scale (the Milky Way is estimated to be some 100,000 light-years across).

In order for the Sun (or our solar system) to befall a similar fate, we'd have to be much, much, much closer to it. For us to experience disastrous effects, the black hole would have to be within a few hundred AU (1 Astronomical Unit, or AU = the distance between the Earth and the Sun, approximately 93,000,000 miles). It's a little difficult to visualize these monstrous expanses of space, but suffice to say that the distance I'm trying to describe is a tiny fraction of a light year (1/200th or so, give or take). Since we reside a comfy 26,000 light years from the galactic center, we're simply too far away to be affected.

Great Post!
Nerd%20Kit_jpg.jpg
 
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WolverineTX;680410; said:
Even a supermassive black hole many millions of times the mass of our Sun has a limited gravitational "reach," so to speak -- and they're rather small in the grand scheme of things when you're talking about a galactic scale (the Milky Way is estimated to be some 100,000 light-years across).

In order for the Sun (or our solar system) to befall a similar fate, we'd have to be much, much, much closer to it. For us to experience disastrous effects, the black hole would have to be within a few hundred AU (1 Astronomical Unit, or AU = the distance between the Earth and the Sun, approximately 93,000,000 miles). It's a little difficult to visualize these monstrous expanses of space, but suffice to say that the distance I'm trying to describe is a tiny fraction of a light year (1/200th or so, give or take). Since we reside a comfy 26,000 light years from the galactic center, we're simply too far away to be affected.

Thank you Professor Hawking now get back to cleaning up your drool.
 
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