"Distant Galaxy's Black Hole Duo: Unraveling Mysterious Hiccups and Flares"

Astronomers have observed a supermassive black hole in a distant galaxy exhibiting periodic outbursts, emitting plumes of gas every 8.5 days before returning to a quiet state. This behavior, never before seen in black holes, is believed to be caused by a smaller black hole orbiting the larger one and disrupting its gas disk. The findings challenge the traditional understanding of black hole accretion disks and suggest the existence of a new population of such systems. The discovery was made using automated telescopes and NASA's NICER X-ray telescope, and the research has implications for understanding the behavior of black hole binaries in galactic nuclei.
- Persistent “hiccups” in a far-off galaxy draw astronomers to new black hole behavior MIT News
- 1st detection of 'hiccupping' black hole leads to surprising discovery of 2nd black hole orbiting around it Livescience.com
- Supermassive black hole's mysterious hiccups' likely caused by neighboring black hole's 'punches' Space.com
- Study: Distant galaxy's powerful flares reveal dancing black holes Interesting Engineering
- Black hole in a distant galaxy has an amazing companion The Universe. Space. Tech
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