This is what it looks like when a black hole tears a star apart

Nasa release an animation showing what it would be like when a star is swallowed by a black hole.

Rachel Feltman
Thursday 22 October 2015 16:55 BST
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Massive Black Hole Shreds Passing Star

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Louise Thomas

Louise Thomas

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Is there any death more beautiful than a star's? They form colourful, glowing nebulae, they explode into supernovas, and sometimes they get torn apart by black holes.

You can see an animation approximating that last event in the video above, courtesy of NASA. In a paper published Wednesday in Nature, researchers reported evidence of an event called a "tidal disruption," observed using X-ray telescopes. Basically, when a star comes too close to a black hole, the massive gravity of the latter pulls the former apart. In this case, the black hole in question had a mass a few million times greater than that of our sun.

“We have seen evidence for a handful of tidal disruptions over the years and have developed a lot of ideas of what goes on,” lead study author Jon Miller of the University of Michigan said in a statement. “This one is the best chance we have had so far to really understand what happens when a black hole shreds a star.”

Here's what we're seeing: The gravity of the black hole pulls most of the star's material down in a filament, heating it to millions of degrees and creating an X-ray flare that astronomers are able to catch via telescopes, such as NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. But then something interesting happens: As the material falls into the black hole's event horizon — from which no light can escape — this flare disappears. So it appears to form a hot, smooth disk as the gaseous star remnants orbit the point at which the black hole will overtake them. Because the center of the disk is so hot, it expels some of its material outward as wind.

The tidal disruption event they observed — known as ASASSN-14li — occurred about 290 million light years away from Earth. But it's still the closest tidal disruption seen in a decade, according to NASA.

Reporting by Washington Post

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