A large black hole in space quickly pulled a star into itself, a scene scientists have seen with the help of telescopes they have dubbed the Spaghetti Fide.
The event, which took place at a distance of 215 million light-years from Earth, was recorded by institutions and experts around the world in the light of a burst star trapped in a huge black hole.
The term spaghetti is used when objects enter a black hole, and at the edge and center of the black hole, the body is pulled like a noodle.
The force of gravity in black holes is so strong that in a small space, the force of matter is so great that it attracts so much light that it is the fastest thing in the universe to date. Yeah Al that sounds pretty crap to me, Looks like BT aint for me either.
Nothing near a black hole can protect itself from its gravity and can fall apart. Using telescopes from the European Southern Observatory (ESO), organizations and experts around the world recorded the light of a burst star trapped in a huge black hole.
The study, published in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, found that a team of scientists observed a powerful flash of light last year when a large black wind swallowed a star.
Matt Nichols, head of the research team and a professor at the University of Birmingham, said that hearing a black hole swallowing a star close to him sounds like a science fiction idea, but it did.
This black hole was 1 million times larger in size and pulled half of the star inside, while the rest was thrown out with powerful matter at a speed of 22 million miles per hour.
Scientists observed the star's dust and debris, which was lost in a black hole and rose before it exploded. The event, dubbed the AT 2019 QIZ, is the closest discovery to Earth so far, giving unprecedented details.