Supermassive black holes are even more fearsome eaters than scientists suspected, thanks to a "delivery system" that could help them feed over months rather than hundreds of years.
Years after ripping stars to shreds, 24 black holes suddenly flared up with radio waves in inexplicable 'burping' bouts. Half of all star-killing black holes may experience the same.
what exactly a black hole is. the black hole we are looking at, they are the most heavy object in they are the most heavy object in the whole universe, they are so massive that they collapse space and time, nothing can escape, not even light can escape. time, nothing can escape, not even light can escape- light can escape. they suck everything light can escape. they suck everything in light can escape. they suck everything in and light can escape. they suck everything in and the - light can escape. they suck - everything in and the interaction between them, what can we potentially learn from that? so this interaction can potentially learn from that? so this interaction can think potentially learn from that? so this interaction can think of potentially learn from that? so this interaction can think of these - potentially learn from that? so this interaction can think of these black| interaction can think of these black holes as being, they are dragging around on the fabric