

"In this case the star was torn apart with about half of its mass feeding - or accreting - into a black hole of one million times the mass of the sun, and the other half was ejected outward," explained astronomer Edo Berger from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, in a statement. Months of follow-up observations made it clear they were seeing the destruction of a far-off sun as it happened. The powerful phenomenon caught the attention of scientists when a new blast of light near a known supermassive black hole was spotted by telescopes around the world. A galaxy such as the milky way is 52,850 light-years in radius, which is much, much bigger. Black holes can and have swallowed stars, but we haven’t yet seen evidence of a black hole that is big enough to swallow an entire galaxy.

This February 4, and after the Iranian regime repeatedly denied that the US sanctions have affected their economy, Iranian Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri said that Iran is unable to transfer any money because of the financial sanctions. Even though Sagittarius A is big enough to affect every part of our galaxy, it’s not so big as to swallow it. There will be such enormous compression at that point that the invisible void just explodes as it cant take any more and the whole of life starts all over again in simple harmonic fashion. The black hole Swift J1644+57 ate a star 1 million times the mass of the sun, scientists say. so then there will be just one black hole. Scientists have caught a monster black hole swallowing a star for the first time ever. (That means it has a lot of mass, which means it has a really strong gravitational pull much stronger than. The blue lines are gravitational waves, ripples in time. About the great black hole that swallows up the smaller ones. This black hole is 6.6 times more massive than our sun. Astronomers say they were able to capture in unprecedented detail the process of a star being ripped into strips and devoured by a black hole. A Blackhole Swallows Lebanon Saturday, 22 February, 2020 - 12:00 Rajeh Khoury A. J10:20am Updated This illustration provided by Carl Knox depicts a black hole, center, swallowing a neutron star, upper left. It's an astounding event that sounds like science fiction, but it's just plain science. GW200105 wasnt detected as definitively, but scientists suspect it was a merger between a black hole about nine times the mass of the sun and a neutron star about twice as massive as the sun.
