User:Astronomical472/Naked black hole

Not to be confused with Naked singularity


A naked black hole is in most cases a Black hole stripped of its surrounding galaxy. The most famous example of this type of black hole is B3 1715+425. First confirmed by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, this black hole hurtles through the Universe at 2,000 kilometers per second.

Formation

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Most black holes, when colliding, will suck each other up and combine to form a Supermassive black hole with a galaxy surrounding it. Researchers at the NRAO believe that instead of doing that, B3 1715+425 had itself and its galaxy ripped apart by a bigger black hole, leaving almost nothing behind.

Research

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Lead researcher from NRAO, James Condon, recalls how his team hadn’t been looking for a naked black hole. They’d been looking for “orbiting pairs of supermassive black holes, with one offset from the centre of a galaxy, as telltale evidence of a previous galaxy merger.” Instead, they found a rogue black hole only 3,000 light years across, traveling at 3,000 kilometers per second. Condon stated his team believes that B3 1715+425 ran into such a supermassive black hole that B3 1715+425 was torn apart instead of combining with the much bigger black hole.

References

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