The ESA XMM-Newton space telescope has provided two different teams of Astronomers a deep look at repeated outbursts of light from inactive black holes that are attacking the same stars again and again. This discovery is as unexpected as it is shocking as the outbursts from these black holes appear only when a black hole ravages a star. The attacks are as savage as can be when these black holes eat parts of the star under attack.
Hidden Supermassive Black Hole
A hidden supermassive black hole can be "seen" by astronomers when a star veers towards it during a close approach. The star gets ripped apart by strong tidal forces, forming a disk of stellar debris on which the black hole is feeding. Energetic X-rays, UV, optical and radio light can be detected during this process known as a tidal disruption event. The black hole cannot ever be seen. Its presence is surmised from behaviour of things around it- in this case, the stars being eaten alive.
The tidal disruption events occur in a bright light that is called a Flare, which usually lasts for a few months and in this period the black holes eat up the star. However, two new flares with strange behaviour have been observed by XMM-Newton. These flares repeatedly shine bright in X-ray and UV light after the first outburst, suggesting that the stars have not been destroyed completely during the initial encounter with the black holes.
The research led by astronomers Thomas Wevers from the European Southern Observatory, and Zhu Liu from the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Germany, reveal that part of the stars may have survived their first attack from the black holes.
The astronomers discovered repeated flares from two separate galaxies hosting
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