Black holes have been spotted spitting up remnants of stars years after gobbling them up.
AdvertisementAdvertisementSince then, the collaborators have been turning their instruments to monitor 24 black holes for years on end.
In another two of the cases, Cendes noticed the black holes peaking, then fading, then turning on again.
Everything we know about accretion disks may be wrongThe findings could mean we need to rethink how black holes swallow up stars, Cendes said.
The new findings suggest astronomers will have to rethink the relationship between stars and black holes.
Persons:
Yvette Cendes, we'd, Cendes, They've, She's, Cendres, I've
Organizations:
Service, Harvard, Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, ESO, ESA, Hubble, Kornmesser
Locations:
Wall, Silicon, TDEs