When a massive star runs out of fuel, its core collapses into a dense object, ejecting the remaining gas in a process known as a supernova.
What remains are mostly neutron stars or black holes. And now, Hubble seems to have documented the instant when a supernova blinked out — implying that it captured the moment a black hole took control.
While some supernova
explosions, such as SN 1054, are violent and leave clouds of debris for
thousands of years (a.k.a. nebula), the star in question seems to have exploded
and then had all its gas pulled back into the black hole at the core. This may
occur if the star's core collapse is very big. Rather than exploding, the gas
falls into the star's core.
NASA, ESA, and C. Kochanek (OSU)
Only a handful of these
so-called "massive fails" (yep, that is the term they are using) have
been discovered, so astronomers are wary about the findings. However, this
particular star, situated in the galaxy NGC 6946, was visible from 22 million
light-years distant and faded in an instant, implying the presence of a large
stellar-mass black hole.
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