Doomed star circling supermassive black hole could be ripped apart in less than 6 years
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
A star in a faraway galaxy is sending itself into a spiral of doom, repeatedly plunging through a disk of hot gas surrounding a black hole and releasing powerful bursts of X-rays in the process. Soon, it will be torn apart.
That's the assessment of what's going on in the core of a galaxy about 300 million light-years away called LEDA 3091738, where a giant black hole nicknamed "Ansky" is being orbited by a much lower-mass companion object.
The name is derived from the black hole's official designation of ZTF10acnsky, as its outbursts were spotted by the Zwicky Transient Facility on the Samuel Oschin Telescope at California's Palomar Observatory in 2019.
Now, new findings show that Ansky flares in X-rays roughly every four-and-a-half days, and that each flare lasts one-and-a-half days before dying back down and waiting for the cycle to begin again. Astronomers call these flares "quasi-periodic eruptions," or QPEs. So far, only eight sources of QPEs have been discovered in the entire universe, and Ansky produces the most energetic eruptions of those eight.
These new findings are thanks to a team led by Joheem Chakraborty, who is a Ph.D. student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, using the Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) that is fastened to the exterior of the International Space Station, in concert with the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton X-ray space telescope.
"These QPEs are mysterious and intensely interesting phenomena," said Chakraborty in a statement. "One of the most intriguing aspects is their quasi-periodic nature. We're still developing the methodologies and frameworks we need to understand what causes QPEs, and Ansky's unusual properties are helping us improve those tools."
And so, we're slowly forming a picture of why Ansky produces the X-ray flares.
The supermassive black hole involved has a mass on the order of a million suns. It's surrounded by what's called an accretion disk, which is a torus of hot gas swirling around the black hole, waiting to be consumed. Meanwhile, a lower mass object, likely a star, is orbiting very close to the black hole and periodically plows through the accretion disk. As it does so, shockwaves ripple through the torus and heat the gas closest to the star's entry point. This heated gas has to get out of the way of the star, causing huge, expanding clouds of material to be sent billowing into space. It's the heating of this material expelled from the disk that produces the QPEs.
"In most QPE systems the supermassive black hole likely shreds a passing star, creating a small disk very close to itself," said Lorena Hernández-García of the Millennium Nucleus on Transversal Research and Technology to Explore Supermassive Black Holes (TITANS) and the University of Valparaíso, both in Chile. It was Hernández-García who led astronomers to discover Ansky back in 2019. "In Ansky's case, we think the disk is much larger and can involve objects farther away, creating the longer timescales we observe."
Chakraborty's team monitored Ansky with NICER 16 times per day between May and July of 2024, tracking the periodicity of the eruptions and monitoring any changes in that periodicity. After adding XMM-Newton data to fill in any gaps, what they discovered is bad news for the star.
The star's orbital energy provides enough juice to heat the gas in the disk and then expel a quantity of material equivalent to Jupiter's mass at velocities up to 15% of the speed of light. Each time the star plows through the disk and produces a QPE, it loses some orbital energy, causing it to spiral closer to the maw of the black hole.
Assuming the star has the same mass as our sun, then it would take another 400 QPEs — spanning about 2,000 days, or 5 to 6 years — for it to lose all its orbital energy. This process would shrink its orbit, resulting in QPEs happening increasingly faster, until the star is either ripped apart by the black hole's gravitational tidal forces, or otherwise merges with it. If the star has a greater mass than our Sun, then it can survive for longer.
Related Stories:
— James Webb Space Telescope finds a wild black hole growth spurt in galaxies at 'cosmic noon'
— NASA spacecraft spots monster black hole bursting with X-rays 'releasing a hundred times more energy than we have seen elsewhere'
— Could we use black holes to power future human civilizations?
Either way, the degradation of the star's orbit, corresponding to a faster rate of QPEs, should be apparent in the next few years and the rate at which the QPEs are becoming more frequent should tell astronomers about the companion star's mass.
"We're going to keep observing Ansky for as long as we can," said Chakraborty. "We're still in the infancy of understanding QPEs. It's such an exciting time because there's so much to learn."
NICER and XMM-Newton will continue monitoring Ansky, which should eventually enable a more precise prediction of when the star will run out of orbital energy and be destroyed. When that happens, it will release a torrential outpouring of energy and astronomers will be able to witness a star being ripped apart in real time, from beginning to end.
The results from Ansky were published on 6 May in The Astrophysical Journal.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Why are tropical animals so colorful?
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. From the striking rainbow colors of parrots in the rainforest to the brilliant flashes of yellows, oranges and blues in coral reefs, vibrantly colorful wildlife abounds in tropical ecosystems. But what is it about these environments that has driven their animal inhabitants to evolve such eye-catching hues? Broadly speaking, animals tend to use color to communicate, said Oscar Puebla, a fish ecologist at the Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research in Germany. "It could be communication with members of your species — for example, to attract a mate," he told Live Science. "It could be communication to predators to make the point that you're venomous. It could be camouflage to escape predators." The reasons and methods of this color communication vary massively among species and environments. Birds tend to acquire colored pigments — like red, orange and yellow carotenoids — through their diet and use the resulting strong coloration to attract a partner or establish dominance. Meanwhile, fish and mollusks use complex microscopic structures within their cells to bend and diffract light and thus change their color to camouflage them from predators. But whether it's on land or under the sea, tropical conditions have played a huge part in this evolved adaptation. Sign up for our newsletter Sign up for our weekly Life's Little Mysteries newsletter to get the latest mysteries before they appear online. "There's a correlation between the diversity of a certain community and the amount of color or diversity in color that the different species display," said Roberto Arbore, an evolutionary biologist at the Research Center in Biodiversity and Genetic Resources in Portugal who specializes in parrots. "If you live in a very diverse community, such as a rainforest, you need to recognize individuals of the same species because interacting with individuals of different species can be very costly in terms, for example, of mating." Birds, in particular, rely on their sense of sight to perceive the world. The sheer number of avian species in the forest environment therefore drives up this competition to stand out, leading to the extraordinary variety of colors and patterns exhibited by parrots, hummingbirds, toucans and other birds that call the tropics home. However, "we have to be careful always with these colors and color patterns," Puebla cautioned. "The way we perceive colors could be very different from the way other animals perceive it." Related: Why are animals so colorful? This is especially true in marine systems. Because of the way light travels through water, red is absorbed extremely quickly, counterintuitively making it the ideal color for camouflage. Similarly, bright patterns that appear ostentatious to human eyes help many small fish hide from predators in the clear waters of coral reefs. "Reef fishes have a lot of blue and yellow, but many fish do not see that," Puebla said. "These are colors with a very strong contrast, so they use that to break their silhouette as a way of camouflaging." The high diversity and good visibility within tropical environments provide strong evolutionary pressures for colorful appearance, but there's also a physiological explanation for this abundance of color in animals that live near the equator, Arbore said. The production of color, whether through pigments or microstructural features, requires an investment of energy — something in short supply in harsher environments such as the tundra or desert. RELATED MYSTERIES —Why is there so much biodiversity in the tropics? —How do octopuses change color? —Why is the color blue so rare in nature? "Normally, tropical habitats are more rich," Arbore told Live Science. "The conditions are more generous in terms of energy, the availability of food, a milder climate, which has a strong impact on the physiology of animals in tropical environments. Different species can actually invest more energy in color because there is more abundance and the physiological cost of being very colorful is reduced." Whatever the evolutionary advantage, animals' color is inextricably intertwined with their environment, be it the bright birds of the rainforest or the dull silver fish of the deep sea. And the complex and diverse tropical ecosystem provides the perfect blend of competition and natural resources to support a fantastic explosion of vibrant color.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
NASA's Parker Solar Probe spots powerful magnetic explosion aimed at the sun's surface
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. While making a death-defying dive through the sun's atmosphere, NASA's Parker Solar Probe has directly recorded a powerful plasma explosion heading toward our star's surface in unprecedented detail. Parker's new measurements found protons with about 1000 times greater energy than expected and a plasma jet shooting toward the sun, not away from it. Parker was uniquely positioned between the sun and the particles' source, allowing scientists to easily figure out where they came from. These findings indicate that the complexity and strength of tangles in the sun's magnetic field can accelerate charged particles to much greater speeds than expected from the field's strength alone. The sunward plasma jet was caused by "magnetic reconnection" in the sun's atmosphere — the explosive process in which magnetic fields fracture and reconnect. The powerful phenomenon transforms energy stored in the sun's magnetic field into energy that accelerates the solar wind — the constant stream of charged particles that the sun blasts across the solar system. Understanding magnetic reconnection is critical for making better predictions about space weather, which is driven by the solar wind and other energetic outbursts from our star. Space weather is a primary suspect for what stripped away Mars' atmosphere, turning it from a habitable planet into an icy desert wasteland. On Earth, space weather can trigger geomagnetic storms that cause blackouts, damage satellites, interfere with radio and GPS signals, and even put astronauts at risk. On the bright side, it also gives Earth its signature glorious auroras. The sun's magnetic field is extremely powerful, complex and dynamic. Space weather predictions require complicated computer simulations based on equations that describe how magnetic fields behave — but the sun is so large and convoluted that these equations will always be approximations. To improve the models' accuracy, scientists must collect extremely detailed measurements of the sun. This is where the Parker Solar Probe comes in. The Parker Solar Probe is the first mission to fly into the sun's upper atmosphere, called the corona. It has been directly measuring magnetic fields and particles in and around the corona in unprecedented detail, providing scientific insight into the heliosphere (the sun's atmosphere, which encompasses the entire solar system in a massive, elongated bubble). Related: NASA's daredevil solar spacecraft survives 2nd close flyby of our sun "These findings indicate that magnetic reconnection … is an important source of energetic particles in the near-Sun solar wind," lead study author Mihir Desai, director of the Southwest Research Institute's Department of Space Research, said in a statement. "Everywhere there are magnetic fields there will be magnetic reconnection. But the Sun's magnetic fields are much stronger near the star, so there's a lot more stored energy to be released." Understanding the workings of magnetic reconnection events could help scientists better predict harmful space weather, the researchers said. RELATED STORIES —New 8K-resolution photos of the sun show off incredible details of raging sunspots —Space photo of the week: Pink 'raindrops' on the sun captured in greatest detail ever —Powerful Mother's Day geomagnetic storm created radio-disrupting bubbles in Earth's upper atmosphere "Reports from the American Meteorological Society indicated that the powerful solar events in May 2024 wreaked havoc with farmers when extreme geomagnetic storms disrupted the precise GPS-guided navigation systems used to plant, fertilize and harvest rows of seeds, causing an estimated loss of up to $500 million in earning potential," Desai said. "Parker's access to this new data is critical, particularly as we remain in the midst of a very active solar cycle." The latest measurements of magnetic reconnection, reported in a paper published May 29 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, are one of many new discoveries Parker has made. In 2023, over 700 peer-reviewed scientific papers were published using data collected in the probe's first four years of operation, and there are still many more discoveries to be made. The spacecraft completed its second ultra-close flyby of the sun on March 22, zooming within 3.8 million miles (6.1 million kilometers) of the sun's surface — matching its own record from December 2024.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
See the moon shine with famous red star Antares in the southern sky on June 9
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The waxing gibbous moon will shine close to the red star Antares in the constellation Scorpius on the night of June 9. Stargazers in the U.S. will find the moon rising higher over the southeastern horizon after sunset on June 9, with Antares shining brightly around 4 degrees to the lower left of the lunar disk. For context, your little finger held at arms length accounts for roughly 1 degree in the night sky, while your index, middle and ring fingers together amount to around 5 degrees, according to NASA. Antares is also known as the "Heart of the Scorpion" thanks to its prominent position in the zodiacal constellation Scorpius, which itself contains a number of stunning deep sky objects, such as the Messier 4 globular cluster and the closest stellar nursery to Earth — Rho Ophiuchi. As a red supergiant, Antares boasts a diameter 700 times greater than our sun and is known to shine roughly 10,000 times brighter. It is expected to end its life in a dramatic supernova explosion when it runs out of fuel — an event that could happen anytime from tomorrow to a million years or so from now. The lunar disk will appear to close in on Antares as the night of June 9 progresses, with the red star eventually setting above the moon's upper left shoulder as the duo slip beneath the southwestern horizon in the predawn hours of June 10. Viewers based in a number of southern hemisphere countries, including Australia, Tasmania and Papua New Guinea, will see the moon slide directly in front of Antares, blocking its light in an event known as an '"occultation" starting at 4:47 a.m. EDT (0847 GMT), according to Stargazers hoping to capture the majesty of the lunar surface should check out our handy guide detailing how to photograph the moon, while those looking for a closer view of the cosmos should read our lists of the best telescopes and binoculars for exploring the night sky. Editor's Note: If you happen to capture a picture of the moon and Antares and want to share it with readers, then please send your photo(s), comments, and your name and location to spacephotos@