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Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists think so—and it could explain (almost) everything
In 2023, a subatomic particle called a neutrino crashed into Earth with such a high amount of energy that it should have been ...
Black holes themselves emit no light, but the matter spiralling into them forms a hot, dense accretion disc that radiates ...
This research was part of a global effort, involving experts from India and Poland. Apart from the lead authors, Dr. Surajit ...
New simulations show flickering black hole signals arise from unstable shocks inside accretion discs, revealing how matter ...
Space.com on MSN
James Webb Space Telescope reveals new origin story for the universe's 1st supermassive black holes
Recent James Webb Space Telescope data confirms a decade-old theory that the universe's earliest supermassive black holes ...
A new study has connected the famous m87 black hole, the first ever imaged, to its powerful cosmic jet, revealing how it ...
Techno-Science.net on MSN
⚫ Excitement around impossible black holes
For a long time, black holes were seen as mathematical curiosities lacking solid observational proof. This viewpoint changed ...
By studying this unique system, scientists can observe the full life cycle of supermassive Black Holes — from how they power ...
New JWST observations show that supermassive black holes formed rapidly from direct gas collapse, creating massive “seeds” that explain how billion-solar-mass giants emerged just a few hundred million ...
As gas falls toward a black hole, it heats up and shines. If the glow becomes intense enough, it can push incoming gas away. Astronomers call this balancing point the Eddington limit, and for decades ...
Some galaxies eject powerful streams of charged particles—jets—from their centers into space. The prominent jet of Messier 87 ...
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