- This artist’s impression shows the binary system VFTS 243, located in the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Sizes are not to scale: in reality, the blue-white star is about 200,000 times larger than the black hole. The lensing effect around the black hole is shown for illustration purposes only, to make this dark object more noticeable in the image. Credit: ESO / L. Calçada
Colin Stuart of Sky & Telescope wrote:
Some massive stars may collapse completely into black holes — without the fanfare of a supernova.
An international team of astronomers has revealed a black hole that seems to have formed without the usual supernova explosion. By probing exactly how this happened, they've helped cement a long-held suspicion that this mechanism is responsible for a host of disappearing stars.
When a massive star reaches the end of its life, it usually erupts in a cataclysmic celestial fireworks display...
But do massive stars always detonate like this? Not according to a team of astronomers led by Alejandro Vigna-Gómez (Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Germany). Their work centers on a binary system in the Large Magellanic Cloud known as VFTS 243...
When a star dies in a supernova, the material is usually ejected asymmetrically, leading to a kick that sends the stellar remnant surging off across space... Yet the two objects in the VFTS 243 system remain in an almost perfectly circular orbit around one another. If the black hole experienced a kick when it formed, then it must have been only a small one...
In fact, the team concludes that the original star lost only a small amount of mass — up to a third of a Sun — when its dense core collapsed. Rather than casting off its outer layers in a supernova, the collapse released energy primarily through a symmetrical ejection of neutrinos. The resulting kick to the newly formed black hole was just 4 kilometers per second...
Although not an open-and-shut case just yet, the direct collapse of black holes could help solve an enduring astronomical mystery. Previous efforts such as the Vanishing and Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations (VASCO) project have identified 100 stars that suddenly disappeared from the night sky over the last 70 years. If these stars collapsed directly into black holes, without supernova fanfare, that could explain their sudden vanishing act.
https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/1 ... 132.191403
https://explorersweb.com/the-mystery-of ... ing-stars/