Chandra’s Verdict on the Demise of a Star: “Death by Black Hole”
A composite x-ray and optical image of a dwarf galaxy showing the x-ray transcient in the inset. Credit-CFHT (Optical), NASA/CXC/University of Alabama/GSCF/UMD/W.P. Maksym, D.Donato et al.
This week, astronomers announced the detection of a rare event, a star being torn to shreds by a massive black hole in the heart of a distant dwarf galaxy. The evidence was presented Wednesday January 8th at the ongoing 223rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society being held this week in Washington D.C.
Although other instances of the death of stars at the hands of black holes have been witnessed before, Chandra may have been the first to document an intermediate black hole at the heart of a dwarf galaxy in the act.
The results span observations carried out by the space-based Chandra X-ray observatory over a period spanning 1999 to 2005. The search is part of an archival study of observations, and revealed no further outbursts after 2005.
We cant see the star being torn apart by the black hole, but we can track what happens to the stars remains, said University of Alabamas Peter Maksym in a recent press release. A comparison of with similar events seen in larger galaxies backs up the ruling of death by black hole. A competing team led by Davide Donato also looked at archival data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope at the Keck observatory to gain similar results.
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http://www.universetoday.com/107904/chandras-verdict-on-the-demise-of-a-star-death-by-black-hole/