X-Rays Indicate Star Ripped Up by Black Hole
What could rip a star apart?
A black hole.
Giant black holes in just the right mass range would
pull on the front of a closely passing star much more
strongly than on the back.
Such a strong tidal force would stretch out a star and
likely cause some of the star's gasses to fall into the black hole.
The infalling gas has been predicted
to emit just the same blast of
X-rays that have
recently been seen in the center of galaxy
RX J1242-11.
Above, an artist's illustration depicts the
sequence of destruction (assuming that
image-distorting gravitational-lens effects of the
black hole are somehow turned off).
Most of the stellar remains would be flung out into the galaxy.
Such events are rare, occurring perhaps only
one in 10,000 years for typical
black holes at the center of
typical galaxies.