Hubble spots a roaming black hole light
A black holeskulking in the shadows 600 million light-yearsaway in spacegave itself away with a dazzling flash,关键字1 the light of a star it had just gnashed and eaten.
Using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and other observatories, astronomers found the cosmic object in an unexpected place. Rather than sitting dead center in its galaxy like most supermassive black holes, this one was thousands of light-years away from the core — 2,600, in fact.
What's more, there is another enormous black hole that is the actual nucleus. While the catawampus black hole has the mass of 1 million suns, the one that defines the galactic center is 100 million times the mass of the sun.
You May Also Like
The burst of radiation detected, known as a tidal disruption eventor TDE, began when a star wandered too close to the black hole. If not for that stellar snack, the black hole would have escaped astronomers' notice.
"It opens up the entire possibility of uncovering this elusive population of wandering black holes with future sky surveys," said study author Yuhan Yao of UC Berkeley in a statement. "I think this discovery will motivate scientists to look for more examples of this type of event."
SEE ALSO: Soviets were headed to Venus in 1972. The spacecraft is about to return.
Out of about 100 TDE events discovered through surveys so far, this one, dubbed AT2024tvd, is the first scientists have seen emerging from a supermassive black hole that is not a galactic nucleus. The research team's findings, announced by NASA, will be published in an upcoming issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Black holes are some of the most inscrutable phenomena in outer space. About 50 years ago, they were little more than a theory— a kooky mathematical answer to a physics problem. Even astronomers at the top of their field weren't entirely convinced they existed. Today, not only are black holes accepted science, they're getting their pictures takenby a collection of enormous, synced-up radio dishes on Earth.
Unlike a planet or star, black holes don't have surfaces. Instead, they have a boundary called an "event horizon," or a point of no return. If anything swoops too close, like the doomed aforementioned star, it will fall in, never to escape the hole's gravitational clutch.
The most common kind, called a stellar black hole, is thought to be the result of an enormous star dying in a supernova explosion. The star's material then collapses onto itself, condensing into a relatively tiny area.
How supermassive black holes form is even more elusive. Astrophysicists believe these invisible giants lurk in the heart of virtually all galaxies. Recent Hubble observations have bolstered the theorythat they begin in the dusty cores of starburst galaxies, where new stars are rapidly assembled, but scientists are still teasing that out.

As the star was stretched and torn asunder in the TDE, some of its gas formed a glowing ring around the black hole. The resulting flareflashed brightly in ultraviolet and visible light.
Related Stories
- Webb telescope may have just revealed a spiral galaxy's startling secret
- Hubble captures a stunning cradle of stars in neighboring galaxy
- The best telescopes for gazing at stars and solar eclipses in 2024
- Astronomers wonder if galaxies are falling into this giant black hole
- He found a Milky Way black hole 50 years ago, and finally got to see it
Telescopes on the ground, such as the Zwicky Transient Facility in California, first detected it. But it was Hubble that confirmed the flare's off-center location. NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatoryin space and the Very Large Arrayin New Mexico provided supporting data.
The two supermassive black holes both reside in the same galaxy, yet they are not a binary pair, meaning they're not bound to each other through gravity. Scientists don't know how the wandering black hole got there.

One possibility is that the smaller black hole came from a smaller galaxy that at some point merged with the larger one, bringing its central black hole along for the ride. Eventually, the smaller black hole may spiral into the larger one. For now, it's doing its own thing.
Another possibility is that it was ganged up on by a couple of bully black holes. In so-called three-body interactions, the lowest-mass object can be evicted from the center of a galaxy, with the two others remaining in the galaxy's core.
"Theorists have predicted that a population of massive black holes located away from the centers of galaxies must exist," said Ryan Chornock, a member of the ZTF team, in a statement, "but now we can use TDEs to find them.”
相关文章:
- WWDC 2025 keynote livestream: Watch Apple's iOS 26 announcements and more live
- 计算机教师工作总结个人(素材稿件5篇)
- 无尽冬日礼包兑换码2025最新4月
- 详解RedHat Linux的常用命令和常见的日志文件
- 《什么时候能不离开家》(西沙演唱)的文本歌词及LRC歌词
- 苹果WWDC 2025发布会汇总:iOS 26秋季推出、全新“液态玻璃”设计
- 南方养老金支援东北?回应:国家正建立中央基金调剂制度
- 中央气象台:南方地区降雨面广点强 广东北部等地局地有暴雨
- 李伟:脱下了军装 脱不下担当
- 英雄没有闪雷旋风技能搭配推荐攻略
- 黑神话像素版第二章有什么内容 黑神话像素版第二章预告
- 上海出台优化博士后发展综合环境文件 打造全过程全方位全链条支撑体系
- Win 7下取消硬盘主动关闭
- 万能沙雕评论美女语录 适合用来夸美女的语录
- 暗喻幻想全部阿基态怎么解锁 暗喻幻想所有阿基态解锁条件一览
- Brennan Lee Mulligan on 'Dimension 20: Cloudward, Ho!' and bringing steampunk to the dome
- Apple WWDC 2025: What to expect, including 'radical' iOS overhaul
- 奋力书写“暖心答卷”,让老年人生活有助,安全有护,健康有保障
- 河南洛阳街头摊贩出售假鸡蛋 用树脂等制成
- 11 Tech Products That Were Supposed to Fail... But Didn't