Black Hole Caught In Act Of Swallowing A Star

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- chew_chew
- added this
For the first time, a black hole has been caught in the act of tearing apart and swallowing a star that got too close.
Scientists, who until now had witnessed only the aftermath of such events, say the observation is shedding light on "relativistic jets," bursts of matter that shoot out at nearly the speed of light.
At the centers of virtually all large galaxies are supermassive black holes. These monsters, which are millions to billions of times the mass of the sun, can rip apart passers-by, gravitationally pulling at stars in gigantic versions of how our moon tugs on Earth's oceans to generate tides.
Evidence for this destruction may come in the form of a bright flare of ultraviolet, gamma and X-rays, a flare that can theoretically last for years as the star is gradually consumed. Although scientists have observed the aftermath of such "tidal disruption" events several times, they had never seen the onset of one.
"Now we've seen the start of this event for the first time," study co-author David Burrows, an astrophysicist at Pennsylvania State University, told Space.com.
The Swift satellite observed a string of extremely bright bursts of gamma rays from outside our galaxy that began March 25 and lasted about two days. Scientists have detected gamma ray bursts in the past, but this pattern of light was completely different.
"It was nothing like we expected for a gamma-ray burst," said Ashley Zauderer, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who co-authored a different study on the event.
Additional observations by several radio telescopes suggested the flare occurred in the center of a galaxy, and that the source of this radiation was expanding at 99.5 percent the speed of light. This suggested the flare came from a relativistic jet released after a black hole ripped apart a star, which scientists named Swift J1644+57.
Based on the wavelengths of light emitted by the flare and the way it evolved over time, the scientists concluded that it originated from matter falling or accreting onto a black hole about 1 million times the mass of the sun, comparable to the supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way.
In the past, scientists had missed the fact that relativistic jets could form as black holes ripped apart stars. This helps explain why the flare had X-rays 10,000 times brighter than predicted for a tidal disruption event: Basically, relativistic jets are focused bursts of energy.
"It's not surprising that such an event would cause jets, but it was just never discussed in past publications," Burrows said.
Future research could reveal more outbursts of this kind. Knowing how often these occur will help scientists figure out just how many galaxies harbor supermassive black holes, what the properties of these monsters are, the density of stars in galactic cores, and how these jets form.
"There are a lot more surprises in space for us to discover, especially as we continue to make huge strides in the technical capabilities of our instruments," Zauderer said.
The scientists detailed their findings in two papers in the Aug. 25 issue of the journal Nature.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44273287/ns/technology_and_science-space/#.TlZ8Yl34JVM
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- groups:
- Community, Tech, Culture, Technology, 3 more
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- tags:
- Space, Black Holes, Nom Nom Nom
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Richard_Wyatt
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Really cool thanks for sharing
- 9 months ago
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Richard_Wyatt
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jubal
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Me, too. Love it, Love it, Love it.
- 9 months ago
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jubal
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Lairderg
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Amazing. Keep these science photos in the news. Maybe the ignorant won't be able to ignore it if they see it enough.
- 9 months ago
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Lairderg
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Snails
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So, where the hell does all that energy go? Is it condensed to a slow vibration, viewing itself subjectively as well?
- 9 months ago
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Snails
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EarnestT
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Snails:
What if all that energy is sucked into the blackhole until it becomes so dense and heavy that it tears a hole in space/time? Then it appears in a new rift in space/time explodes and creates a new universe. Can you say"Big Bang"?,sure i knew ya could! If not that then it`s a sign from God like the crack in the Washington Monument like Pat Robertson says!
- 9 months ago
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EarnestT
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EarnestT
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Snails:
Or it was absorbed by Michelle Bachmann,Thus the crazy eyes! Like she French Kissed a Light Socket!
- 9 months ago
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EarnestT
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remanns
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kewl. Added to "Space".
- 9 months ago
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remanns
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dugdog47
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Makes one ponder, what's outside the universe. Was the big bang real? If so, what forces could condense all matter into a tiny ball. What was here before the big bang? Where was it? What made it.go bang? Does space end? If not, how could it go on forever?
- 9 months ago
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dugdog47
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hoosierdaddy
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Damn. Just damn.
- 9 months ago
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hoosierdaddy
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chew_chew
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It had been my understanding that nothing could escape a black hole, not even light. But:
"The Swift satellite observed a string of extremely bright bursts of gamma rays from outside our galaxy that began March 25 and lasted about two days. Scientists have detected gamma ray bursts in the past, but this pattern of light was completely different."
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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letsliveinpeace
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Very informational thanks for posting.
- 9 months ago
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letsliveinpeace
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letsliveinpeace
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Well now, I would NOT want to be in that neighborhood. EXTRA crispy.
- 9 months ago
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letsliveinpeace
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chew_chew
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letsliveinpeace:
Maybe that's why black holes are black... chard from eating hot stars. ;-)
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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SandyBerman
- This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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SandyBerman
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chew_chew
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SandyBerman:
I sometimes get lost at space.com, Sandy. I agree, tons of way cool info, photos, renderings, etc.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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mickyjon420
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From the title I thought at first, "why do I want to know about a new Ron Jeremy movie?", then after reading I was glad I did, Thanks for the post Chew.
- 9 months ago
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mickyjon420
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OlBlue
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What becomes of the stuff that gets sucked into a black hole?
- 9 months ago
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OlBlue
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chew_chew
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OlBlue:
I think there are a lot of folks working on that one, OlBlue. I know it is above my pay grade.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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Forgotten_Echo
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OlBlue:
There are some views, hypothetical of course, which would pose the blackhole as the opening of a super massive wormhole. At the other end of this wormhole, a "whitehole" would spew forth energy and matter. It is also conjectured that this wormhole could cross over it a parallel universe.
- 9 months ago
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Forgotten_Echo
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OlBlue
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Forgotten_Echo:
Is that what happened at the end of 2001? The movie?
- 9 months ago
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OlBlue
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Joseph_Today
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this is like something out of Star Trek
- 9 months ago
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Joseph_Today
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chew_chew
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Joseph_Today:
Yep. Beam me up, Joseph.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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coolplanet
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As Hermes said long ago, "As Above, So Below."
The same thing is happening right here on Earth! - 9 months ago
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coolplanet
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CreditFigaro
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coolplanet:
Yeah, the rich.
- 9 months ago
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CreditFigaro
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chew_chew
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coolplanet:
On many levels.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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NiceN
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I can only hope that one day we can observe such fantastic events on board a space craft. The universe is amazing.
- 9 months ago
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NiceN
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chew_chew
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NiceN:
Amazing indeed.
"I can only hope that one day we can observe such fantastic events on board a space craft."
What a wonderful view that would be!
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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Forgotten_Echo
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NiceN:
If only humanity as a whole held this same hope and fastination. Just imagine where we could have been today if we had continued "full" pursuit of space travel, instead of feeling complacant with reachng the moon.
In May of 1994, physicist Miguel Alcubierre proposed the paper "The Warp Drive: Hyper-fast travel within general relativity". ( http://arxiv.org/abs/grqc/0009013 ) Alcubierre was not looked at as a crack-pot, his science and his theory is sound and accepted.
With the overpopulation and steady depletion of resources, one would think that the Alcubierre Drive was worth investing the time and research necessary to achieve what we could consider "true" space travel and exploration.
- 9 months ago
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Forgotten_Echo
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chew_chew
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Forgotten_Echo:
Surfing on steroids.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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Snails
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Forgotten_Echo:
That's Awesome! Had not heard of this type of technology being for real, very interesting, but didn't Zefram Cochrane invent the warp drive? :P
- 9 months ago
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Snails
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sugarmountian
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At first I thought it was a picture of bachmann eating a corndog in Iowa.
- 9 months ago
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sugarmountian
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crabbyoldguy
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sugarmountian:
Strange I thought it was Obama sucking the life out of the United States.
- 9 months ago
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crabbyoldguy
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EthicalVegan
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sugarmountian:
Same thing.
- 9 months ago
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EthicalVegan
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Leen61
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Wow! This is a trip! Very freaky.
- 9 months ago
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Leen61
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attilatheblond
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Fascinating. Thanks for posting this, chew_chew. I would have missed this one and that would have been a real loss to me.
- 9 months ago
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attilatheblond
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chew_chew
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attilatheblond:
My wife sent me an email with this from her office, knowing how interested I am in things of this nature. My scientific knowledge is very close to absolute zero, but my wonder with our universe is wide-eyed and curious as a two year old child.
Happy you enjoyed the info, too, attila.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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EthicalVegan
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That is so phenomenal. And I absolutely love the article's headline!
- 9 months ago
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EthicalVegan
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chew_chew
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EthicalVegan:
Yeah, EV, the headline sparked a lot of mental pictures for me, too.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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squarethecircle
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So much to learn, have we.
- 9 months ago
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squarethecircle
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attilatheblond
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squarethecircle:
Getting slower to learn, we are.
- 9 months ago
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attilatheblond
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chew_chew
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squarethecircle:
And running out of time, we may be.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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Snails
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Great, so not only do we have asteroids, and solar flares, and other scary shit in the sky, but now we have to worry about "relativistic jets of focused blackhole energy" FUCK!!! We need to develop warp drive, contact the Vulcans and spread the fuck out, i don't like our current status as a single, stationary target.
I'm glad we're learning more about them though, that counts for something. But we definitely need some warp drive asap!
MAKE IT SO!
- 9 months ago
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Snails
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sugarmountian
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Snails:
lmao!
- 9 months ago
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sugarmountian
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Snails:
We are far from stationary buddy
- 9 months ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Snails
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
Wha??, the universe doesn't revolve around us??! Blasphemy!!!
lol, yeh bad choice of wording on my part.
- 9 months ago
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Snails
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chew_chew
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Omle_Du_Fromage:
"We are far from stationary buddy"
chuckle
Q: How fast are we going?
A: In which direction?
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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chew_chew:
lol
1: 67,000 mph
2: ....that way - 9 months ago
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Omle_Du_Fromage
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Vic_Romano
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Far out....I mean really far out....and let's hope those things stay far out.
- 9 months ago
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Vic_Romano
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chew_chew
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Vic_Romano:
I hope those things stay far out, too. It is fascinating to me, though, that we have finally caught one at the beginning.
Thanks for commenting, Vic.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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chew_chew
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For the first time, a black hole has been caught in the act of tearing apart and swallowing a star that got too close.
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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mickyjon420
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chew_chew:
"A black hole has been caught in the act of tearing apart and swallowing a star that got too close." I hope the Star was Paris Hilton.
- 9 months ago
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mickyjon420
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chew_chew
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mickyjon420:
I noticed one of the posts here on Current was The World According To Paris TV show was cancelled. Coincidence? hmmmm... ;-)
- 9 months ago
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chew_chew
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mickyjon420
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chew_chew:
ROFLMAO, as skinny and homely as she is it's no surprise her just being a slut can't repel a Black hole.
- 9 months ago
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mickyjon420