NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has discovered a tidal disruption event 300 million light years away. The donut shaped remains of a star were found around a hungry black hole.
Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
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00:00 Astronomers, using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, have recorded a star's final moments in detail
00:06 as it was ripped apart and eaten up by a black hole in a tidal disruption event.
00:12 The shredded star is nearly 300 million light-years away, but astronomers used Hubble's powerful
00:19 ultraviolet sensitivity to analyze its light to gather forensic clues of the violent event.
00:26 Hubble data found a very bright, hot, donut-shaped area of gas the size of the solar system swirling
00:32 around a black hole.
00:34 The swirling gas was once a star.
00:38 Usually, astronomers get just a few observations at the beginning of a disruption event, when
00:43 it's very bright, but this energetic collision's proximity and brightness allowed Hubble to
00:49 gather ultraviolet data over a longer-than-normal time period.
00:55 This is a rare opportunity for scientists to create models of what they think is going
00:59 on and then compare those models with what Hubble sees.
01:03 It is an exciting place for scientists to be, right at the intersection of the known
01:10 and the unknown.
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