2019 September 3
Explanation:
What created this unusual explosion?
Three weeks ago, gravitational wave detectors in the USA and Europe -- the
LIGO and
Virgo detectors -- detected a burst of gravitational radiation that had the
oscillating pattern
expected when a
black hole destroys a
neutron star.
One object in
event S190814sv
was best fit with a mass greater than five times the mass of the Sun --
making it a good candidate for a black hole, while the other object
appeared to have a mass less than three times the mass of the
Sun --
making it a good candidate for a neutron star.
No similar event had been detected with gravitational waves before.
Unfortunately, no light was seen from
this explosion,
light that might have been triggered by the disrupting
neutron star.
It is theoretically possible that the lower mass object was also a black
hole, even though no clear example of a black hole with such a low mass
is known.
The
featured video was created to illustrate a previously suspected
black hole - neutron star collision detected in light in 2005, specifically gamma-rays from the burst
GRB 050724.
The animated video starts with a foreground
neutron star orbiting a black hole surrounded by an
accretion disk.
The black hole's gravity then shreds the neutron star, creating a jet as debris falls into the black hole.
S190814sv
will continue to be researched, with clues about the nature of the
objects involved possibly coming from future detections of similar
systems.