Pic of black hole sucking a star in


















“The idea of a black hole “sucking in” a nearby star sounds like science fiction, but this is exactly what happens in a tidal disruption. The black hole at ArpB's core apparently got hungry during the merge and sucked up a local star twice the mass of our own sun. Download this Black Hole Sucking Stars Light Matter And Time photo now. And search more of iStock's library of royalty-free stock images.


 · Scientists have caught a monster black hole swallowing a star for the first time ever. The black hole Swift J+57 ate a star 1 million times Estimated Reading Time: 5 mins.  · , 23 Oct Updated , 23 Oct NASA has revealed a stunning animation showing exactly what would happen to a star if it was sucked into a black hole. The artist's rendering shows Estimated Reading Time: 3 mins.  · Tech Science Astrophysics Astronomy Black holes Space. Scientists have spotted a supermassive hole "sucking in" a star around million light-years from Earth, causing it to be "spaghettified.


11k Followers, 1 Following, 48 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from The Big Black Ass (@thebigblackass). Browse 11, black hole stock photos and images available, or search for black hole space or black hole in space to find more great stock photos and pictures. In this handout photo provided by the National Science Foundation, the Event Horizon Telescope captures a black hole at the center of galaxy M This is the first picture of a black hole. The supermassive black hole imaged by the EHT is located in the center of the elliptical galaxy M87, located about 55 million light years from Earth. This image was captured by FORS2 on ESO's Very Large Telescope. The short linear feature near the center of the image is a jet produced by the black hole.


Subscriber Account active since. Astronomers have captured a rarely-seen event: a flare of light caused by a black hole devouring a nearby star like spaghetti. Observed in the Eridanus constellation, about million light-years away from Earth, the star's destruction is the closest such event astronomers have ever observed. This process is called a tidal disruption event — or, more colloquially, "spaghettification," a nod to the long, thin strands a star becomes as the black hole's gravity stretches it thinner and thinner.

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