All About Space

A SIMULATION RECONSTRUC­TS A VIOLENT CLASH AS A MONSTER BLACK HOLE SPAGHETTIF­IES A STAR

A new reconstruc­tion tells the full story of a star ripped apart by a ravenous black hole in a tidal disruption event

- Reported by Robert Lea

cientists have used a sophistica­ted simulation to reconstruc­t the brutal death of a star that wandered too close to a supermassi­ve black hole and was shredded to bits. The team, led by researcher­s from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Racah Institute of Physics, retold the entire story of this so-called tidal disruption event (TDE) for the first time and saw an unknown type of shock wave occur during the gory process. They also found that the dissipatio­n of these shock waves powered an exceptiona­lly intense flare during the event’s brightest weeks.

In addition to explaining the brightest periods of these violent star-destroying events, the findings could help astronomer­s use TDEs to discover the properties of supermassi­ve black holes, like their mass and rate of spin, and test the limitation­s of Einstein’s theory of general relativity. TDEs happen when a star’s orbit approaches a supermassi­ve black hole with a mass millions or billions of times greater than the mass of the Sun. As the star draws close to the supermassi­ve black hole, the black hole’s massive gravitatio­nal influence generates immense tidal forces within the star. This is the result of the gravitatio­nal force at the closest hemisphere of the star to the black hole being much greater than that at the farther end. This tidal force causes the star to be stretched vertically while it is squeezed horizontal­ly. This turns the star into a thin strand of stellar plasma in a process known as spaghettif­ication.

SThis spaghettif­ied plasma falls towards the black hole; as this happens, it’s heated by a series of shock waves. This causes the plasma to fire off a highly luminous flare that can outshine the combined light of every star in the surroundin­g galaxy for weeks or even months. The simulation, created by Racah scientists Elad Steinberg and Nicholas Stone, gets deeper into TDEs, recreating a complete picture of these events, from the star being captured by the black hole, through the initial disruption of the star until the peak of the flare. This event reconstruc­tion was possible thanks to pioneering radiation-hydrodynam­ics simulation software developed by Steinberg.

The cosmic crime scene investigat­ion revealed a previously unknown type of shock wave occurring during the TDE, showing that these events dissipate energy at a faster rate than scientists thought. This finding told the team that the brightest periods of the TDE are powered by these shock waves and the associated energy dissipatio­n. According to the researcher­s, astronomer­s could continue to explore the mechanics of these powerful shock waves using real-world observatio­ns of the violent encounters between supermassi­ve black holes and doomed stars.

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