News on Stars
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- Oslo-experiment may explain massive star explosions
- The globular cluster M55
- Type 1a supernova have 2 sources
- Star surrounded by rare disk of quarts dust
- Aging star erupting with dust, as it prepartes for
- An old star with some new tricks
- The origin of brown dwarf substellar objects
- Black hole outburst i the M83 galaxy
- Star torn apart by black hole identified
- The last gasps of ligth from a dying star
- A star-cluster within another cluster
- Astronomers detect coolest dwarf-star
- The lives of supergiants stars
- Discovery of 2 nearby white dwarf stars
- Comet massacre around nearby star
- Black Holes grow, by eating stars
- Stars explode inside-out
- Watch a star explode
- New theory on size of black holes
- Origin of Class 1a supernovae narrowed down
- Panets figth over popular orbits
- Best-ever image of globular star-cluster
- Sister-stars drifting apart
- Rare peek at early stage of star formation
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A star is torn
Tuesday, 09 August 2011 12:35
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| Astronomy - Stars |
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A University of Sydney researcher was part of an international team of astronomers that has observed an incredibly rare event that occurs once every 10.000 years per galaxy; A flare from supermassive black hole, when an entire star was devoured. The astronomers saw a star that had strayed too close to a super massive black hole being literally torn apart. The Australian, Dr Sean Farrell, an ARC post-doctoral fellow in the School of Physics, said the observation was first made in 2006 through the European Space Agency's X-ray Telescope, XMM-Newton. Super massive black holes (SMBH) have been theoretically predicted by theories Einstein wrote in 1915, but little is known about them. "We know that they exist in the middle of galaxies and have three known traits: mass, spin and charge. The first two of these can be measured but the third cannot. We do know if something goes into a SMBH it will never be seen again," says Dr Farrell. "So to have witnessed such a rare event provides us with an incredible opportunity to study what happens to stars when they get too close to the edge of a SMBH." Dr Farrell says that these observations will be important for testing theories on gravity as well as helping us understand how SMBH grow or 'feed'. "Black holes are crucial in how galaxies form and evolve. This is very important as their influence on galaxies has an enormous effect on gas, stars, planets, and, of course, life itself," Dr Farrell explains."By studying the boundaries of black holes we can gain crucial knowledge about these extreme objects and their impact in the universe." Source: University of Sydney |




