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Echoes of light said evidence of black hole consuming star or planet

This undated NASA images taken by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory shows the star-forming region, 30 Doradus. This formation is one of the largest located close to the Milky Way and consists of about 2,400 massive stars, November 28, 2011. UPI/NASA
This undated NASA images taken by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory shows the star-forming region, 30 Doradus. This formation is one of the largest located close to the Milky Way and consists of about 2,400 massive stars, November 28, 2011. UPI/NASA | License Photo

GREENBELT, Md., Oct. 24 (UPI) -- Scientists say a NASA X-ray observatory has captured evidence of material, possibly from a star or planet, falling into the Milky Way's central black hole.

Data from the orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory on emissions from gas clouds in the normally dim region very close to the supermassive black hole showed they've flared up with at least two luminous outbursts in the past few hundred years.

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The most probable cause of the outbursts was light echoes, NASA reported Thursday.

If material from a star or planet fell into the black hole, the episodes would create X-rays that would have bounced off gas clouds about 30 to 100 hundred light years away from the black hole.

Just as echoes of sound reverberate long after the original noise was created, so too do light echoes in space replay the original event, astronomers said.

The X-ray echoes suggest that the area very close to the black hole, also known as Sagittarius A*, was at least a million times brighter within the past few hundred years.

Astronomers said they believed at least two separate outbursts were responsible for the light echoes observed by the Chandra observatory.

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