ASTRONOMY PICTURE

OF THE DAY

OCTOBER 28, 2015

Massive Black Hole Shreds Passing Star

EXPLANATION

What happens when a star gets too close to a black hole? Recent observations from Earth-orbiting observatories of an event dubbed ASASSN-14li, in a distant galactic center, appears to be giving one star’s harrowing story. Although angularly unresolved, variations in high energy light indicate that some of the star became shredded and reformed into a disk swirling around the dark abyss. In the hypothesized scenario envisioned, a jet formed on the spin axis of the black hole. The innermost part of the disk, colored white, glows most strongly in X-rays and may drive a periodic wind, shown in blue. Future X-ray and ultraviolet observations of stellar disruptions by black holes—including those in the center of our own galaxy—hold promise of telling us about the complex dynamics of some of the hottest and highest-gravity places in the universe.

Illustration Video Credit

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, CI Lab