Star Escapes Black Hole with Minor Damage
Scientia — Astronomers have gotten the closest look yet at what happens when a black hole takes a bite out of a star—and the star lives to tell the tale.
We may think of black holes as swallowing entire stars—or any other object that wanders too close to their immense gravity. But sometimes, a star that is almost captured by a black hole escapes with only a portion of its mass torn off. Such was the case for a star some 650 million light years away toward Ursa Major, the constellation that contains the “Big Dipper,” where a supermassive black hole tore off a chunk of material from a star that got away.
Astronomers at The Ohio State University couldn’t see the star itself with their All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN, pronounced “assassin”). But they did see the light that flared as the black hole “ate” the material that it managed to capture.
In a paper to appear in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, they report that the star and the black hole are located in a galaxy outside of the newly dubbed Laniakea Supercluster, of which our home Milky Way Galaxy is a part.
If Laniakea is our galactic “city,” this event—called a “tidal disruption event,” or TDE— happened in our larger metropolitan area. Still, it’s the closest TDE ever spotted, and it gives astronomers the best chance yet of learning more about how supermassive black holes form and grow.
ASAS-SN has so far spotted more than 60 bright and nearby supernovae; one of the program’s other goals is to try to determine how often TDEs happen in the nearby universe. But study co-author Krzysztof Stanek, professor of astronomy at Ohio State, and his collaborators were surprised to find one in January 2014, just a few months after ASAS-SN’s four telescopes in Hawaii began gathering data.
To Stanek, the fact that the survey made such a rare find so quickly suggests that TDEs may be more common than astronomers realized.
Star Escapes Black Hole with Minor Damage
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