Black hole caught committing 'stellar homicide' - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 06:49 AM | Calgary | -0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Black hole caught committing 'stellar homicide'

Astronomers have caught a black hole in the midst of a violent act, watching in real time as it tore a sun-like star apart with gravitational forces so strong that helium gas was flowing in a stream moving at 32 million kilometers an hour.

Astronomers watch as sun-like star shredded and swallowed over weeks

This computer-simulated image shows gas from a tidally-shredded star falling into a black hole. Some of the gas also is being ejected at high speeds into space. (NASA, S. Gezari/J. Guillochon/NASA)

Astronomers have caught a black hole in the midst of a violentact, watching in real time as it tore a sun-like star apart with gravitational forces so strong that helium gas was flowing in a stream moving at 32 million kilometers an hour.

"We saw the messy carnage involved in this stellar homicide," said Dr. Suvi Gezari, associate research scientist with Johns Hopkins University's department of physics and astronomy. Gezari spoke to CBC Radio host Bob McDonald in an interview that airs on Quirks& Quarkson Saturday, May 5,atnoon.

COMING UP

Dr. Suvi Gezaritalks toQuirks & QuarksMay 5at noon on CBC Radio One

The destruction of the starwhich was likelyin the later parts of its life before the black hole cutit even shorterwas seen in June 2010as a luminous flare of radiation by two telescopes watching at two different wavelengths: an ultravioletNASA satellite and a ground-based optical telescope in Hawaii.

Theevent, similar in scope toa supernova but taking much longer,reached peak brightness a month later and slowly faded over the course of a year.

It was the most direct evidence ever gathered of a black hole destroying a star. Black holes, regions of space weighing millions of times more than the sun, are extremely difficult to find because they're only detectable if there is gas spiralling intothemsomething that might happen once every 100,000 years in any given galaxy.

The star's destruction was so bright it outshone the other stars in that galaxy, which is about 2.7 billion light years away.

"We were watching in real-time, but we still actually didnt figure out what this event was until almost a year later," Gazari said.

The information the astronomers gatheredallowed themtocalculate that the black hole had the mass of aboutthree million sun-like stars. By comparison, the black hole in the middle of theMilkyWay is about 4 million times the mass of the sun.

The astronomers also believe the star had likely already lost its outer layers during a previous pass near the black hole.

"When the star is ripped apart by the gravitational forces of the black hole, some part of the star's remains falls into the black hole while the rest is ejected at high speeds," Gezari told NASA in a separate interview. "We are seeing the glow from the stellar gas falling into the black hole over time. We're also witnessing the spectral signature of the ejected gas, which we find to be mostly helium. It is like we are gathering evidence from a crime scene. Because there is very little hydrogen and mostly helium in the gas, we detect from the carnage that the slaughtered star had to have been the helium-rich core of a stripped star."

Gezari said thediscovery should help scientists discover other, similar events more easily perhaps by the thousands.

The video below showsa computer simulation ofa star being shredded by the gravity of a massive black hole.

Credit: NASA, S. Gezari (The Johns Hopkins University), and J. Guillochon (University of California, Santa Cruz)