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Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and other telescopes, astronomers have found that a black hole that shredded a star has moved onto a another star or stellar black hole.

Credit: NASA/CXC/A. Hobart

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00:00visit chandra's beautiful universe at 2019 qiz
00:08a massive black hole has torn apart one star and is now using that stellar wreckage to pummel
00:16another star or smaller black hole that used to be in the clear this discovery made with
00:22nasa's chandra x-ray observatory and other telescopes helps astronomers link two mysteries
00:28where there had previously only been hints of a connection in 2019 astronomers witnessed the
00:34signal of a star that got too close to a black hole and was destroyed by the black hole's
00:39gravitational forces once shredded the star's remains began circling the black hole in a disc
00:46in a type of stellar graveyard over a few years however this disc has expanded outward and is
00:53now directly in the path of a star or possibly a stellar mass black hole orbiting the massive
00:58black hole at a previously safe distance the orbiting star is now repeatedly crashing through
01:04the debris disc about once every 48 hours as it circles when it does the collision costs bursts
01:11of x-rays that astronomers captured with chandra like a diver repeatedly going into a pool and
01:18creating a splash every time she enters the water the star striking the disc creates a huge splash of
01:24gas and x-rays as the star orbits around the black hole it does this over and over again scientists have
01:32documented many cases where an object gets too close to a black hole and gets torn apart in a single
01:37burst of light astronomers call these tidal disruption events or tdes in recent years astronomers have also
01:45discovered a new class of bright flashes from the centers of galaxies which are detected only in x-rays
01:51and repeat many times these events are also connected to supermassive black holes but astronomers could
01:57not explain what caused the semi-regular bursts of x-rays they dubbed these quasi-periodic eruptions or qpes
02:05this discovery gives astronomers evidence that tdes and qpes can be different phases of the same phenomenon
02:13in addition to chandra the researchers used nasa's hubble space telescope nicer telescope aboard the
02:19international space station and the neil garrell swift telescope astronomers will continue to look for
02:26more of these events to learn more about how black holes grow and to study the prevalence and distances of
02:31objects in close orbits around massive black holes

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