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Could Mysterious Black Hole Burps Rewrite Physics?
Hubble spotted a rare off-center black hole shredding a star, revealing the first optical discovery of a wandering ...
“ENTs are different beasts,” study lead author and astronomer Jason Hinkle explained in an accompanying statement. “Not only are ENTs far brighter than normal tidal disruption events, but they remain ...
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) occur when a star ventures too close to a supermassive black hole and is gravitationally torn apart by tidal forces.
A new kind of stellar explosion, far brighter and longer-lasting than supernovae, may help scientists explore the secrets of ...
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) are astronomical phenomena that occur when a star passes close enough to a supermassive black hole and is pulled apart by the black hole's tidal forces, causing the ...
Astronomers at the University of Hawaii uncovered black hole events so packed with energy, they were the biggest explosions ...
A group of astronomers from numerous institutions have investigated a recently discovered nearby tidal disruption event known ...
The first known relativistic tidal disruption event, called Swift J1644+57, was detected in 2011 when NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory spotted a strange burst of radiation from the center ...
These tidal disruption events or TDEs are so rare that we’ve never seen one in our own Sag A* black hole. But we’ve seen around 100 candidate TDEs in distant galaxies.
Scientists have discovered the most powerful blasts of energy in the known universe. Dubbed extreme nuclear transients, or ENTs, the cosmic explosions are unprecedented in their intensity.
An artist’s impression of a tidal disruption event, in which a star is spaghettified and the remains form an accretion disk around the black hole. Typically, about half the star’s mass is ...
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