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Black Hole Awakens After 26 Years 58

schwit1 writes: For the first time since 1989, the black hole in V404 Cygni, a system comprising a black hole and a star, has reawakened, suddenly emitting high energy outbursts beginning on June 15. The outbursts are probably occurring because the black hole is gobbling up material that has fallen into it. While the 1989 outburst helped astronomers gain their first understand of the behavior of a black hole in a star system, this outburst will help them understand how such systems evolve and change over time. The European Space Agency (ESA) reports: "First signs of renewed activity in V404 Cygni were spotted by the Burst Alert Telescope on NASA's Swift satellite, detecting a sudden burst of gamma rays, and then triggering observations with its X-ray telescope. Soon after, MAXI (Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image), part of the Japanese Experiment Module on the International Space Station, observed an X-ray flare from the same patch of the sky. These first detections triggered a massive campaign of observations from ground-based telescopes and from space-based observatories, to monitor V404 Cygni at many different wavelengths across the electromagnetic spectrum."
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Black Hole Awakens After 26 Years

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  • by Sneeka2 ( 782894 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @07:21AM (#49993743)

    V200 Cygni

    There, FTFY.

    • Old news (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Pfft ... this happened 7800 years ago ... go /.

      • It was just resting before continuing on with the main course...that much turkey will put anyone to sleep for awhile...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    That is not dead which can eternal lie,
    And with strange aeons even death may die.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @07:23AM (#49993755)
    The black hole just sat there. Something else collided with it, and the black hole gravity pulled it in. The something, probably a gas cloud, heated up during the fall and started to emit radiation. How does this cause something to wake up?
    • by Psychotria ( 953670 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @07:28AM (#49993781)

      The something, probably a gas cloud [...] How does this cause something to wake up?

      I dunno about you, but if someone farted in my face while I was sleeping I'd probably wake up as well.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because by your own words, it was just sitting there. Now its doing something. It woke up. Its like waking up a laptop, yes it wasn't really asleep because it doesn't dream. Its called language, learn to use it motherfucker.

    • Also, the black hole "being seated" somewhere is not so exact as well...
    • by CBM ( 51233 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @08:40AM (#49994289)

      Actually the term is appropriate. Gravity doesn't disappear, but material can orbit the black hole in an accretion disk, in a dormant state. When enough material builds up in the disk, accretion flow to the black hole can activate. It's called an accretion disk instability. In the astronomy business we would say the black hole has become active, or is having a transient outburst, but awaken is fine for public consumption.

  • "this outburst will help them understand how such systems evolve and change over time"

    I can tell you right now. Sometimes something falls in, sometimes it doesn't.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @07:32AM (#49993809)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Terrorism? NSA surveillance? Torture? TWO fucking wars?

    I'm going back to sleep.

  • by StupendousMan ( 69768 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @07:38AM (#49993851) Homepage

    I've been using our university's observatory to take images of V404 Cyg for the past week. On Jun 23/24, the star underwent a particularly crazy series of variations: over a period of six hours, it fell to just 5 percent of its initial brightness, then recovered almost to its starting point.

    I made an animated GIF showing the star's changes over this period. You can see it on my observing log for the the night:

    [rit.edu]http://spiff.rit.edu/richmond/... [rit.edu]

    That page also includes my full dataset, and pointers to additional reading.

    The star is currently bright enough -- mag 11-14 -- to be studied easily with small telescopes. Anyone interested in joining the effort should start with the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) -- go to their campaign page at

    [aavso.org]http://www.aavso.org/aavso-ale... [aavso.org]

    • Error: V404 Not Found

  • by m.alessandrini ( 1587467 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @08:03AM (#49994017)
    IANAA, but I think the exceptional thing here is that such a huge change in an astronomical object can be seen in an human-life time scale, instead of millions years as usual.
    • by CBM ( 51233 )

      Well yes and no. There are probably hundreds of thousands of these systems, lying dormant, in our galaxy. Each one is probably fed by a nearby orbiting donor star, that transfers matter in a slow trickle to an accretion disk which surrounds the black hole. The material kind of stays there, dormant, in the disk. When enough density builds up in the accretion disk, there is an hydrodynamic instability that causes flow to suddenly turn on. This will flush out the disk, the system will eventually turn off

  • Sloppy language (Score:4, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @08:06AM (#49994031) Journal

    Even in TFA, using the term 'reawakened' is so totally mischaracterizing the situation.

    It's not like black holes go dormant, or gravity goes to sleep. No, clearly it's been short of significant infall material and has suddenly consumed something substantial, leading to a burst of outflow energy.

    It's interesting and fascinating, but really we can do better to inform the general public (who is already woefully scientifically ignorant) than using tabloid-level language to explain it.

    Obligatory relevant xkcd: https://xkcd.com/1133/ [xkcd.com] 'Up goer five'

    • Re:Sloppy language (Score:5, Interesting)

      by CBM ( 51233 ) on Friday June 26, 2015 @08:50AM (#49994409)

      Actually, yes, black hole *systems* go dormant. The system consists of the black hole itself, but also an accretion disk orbiting the black hole, and also an orbiting donor star which is providing a relatively steady flow of matter to the outer part of the accretion disk.

      Matter can stay there, in the accretion disk for a year, tens of years, or thousands of years, until enough mass density builds up. At that point, an accretion disk instability turns on and you get a transient outburst, and then it will take a few months to flush out the disk.

      Google for "dwarf nova instability."

  • Someone send Maximillian and VINcent to check it out....

  • And our scientists just got around to noticing last week?

  • ...it actually woke up a long, long time ago.
  • If an event like this were to happen "near" us in astronomical terms, and we were in the (very, very large) path of lethal radiation, we would simply be exterminated. Bruce Willis could not save us.

  • As I said in my biopic, The Sleeper Has Awakened [youtube.com]!

  • I'm just amused because this "current" increase in energy output actually happened about 7,800 years ago, and we're just now getting the news.
    • By slashdot's standards that's good. It can take almost as long for events happening on the other side of the Earth.

  • What's 26 years for a black hole? An eye-blink?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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