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Black Hole Eats Star: NASA Missions Discover Record-Setting Blast

Astronomers have been poring over a flood of data from NASA satellites and other facilities as they try to work out what was responsible for an extraordinary cosmic outburst discovered on July 2.

The event was a GRB (gamma-ray burst), the most powerful class of cosmic explosions. But while most GRBs last only a minute, this one continued for days.

Researchers have been eagerly discussing their findings and agree that the unprecedented event likely heralds a new kind of stellar explosion. Scientists say the best explanation for the outburst is that a black hole consumed a star, but they disagree on exactly how it happened. Exciting possibilities include a black hole weighing a few thousand times the Sun’s mass shredding a star that passed too close to it or a much smaller black hole merging with and consuming its stellar companion.

Unusually long gamma-ray bursts require more exotic origins than typical GRBs. This animation illustrates one proposed explanation for GRB 250702B — the merger of a stellar-mass black hole with its stellar companion. As the black hole makes its last few orbits, it pulls large amounts of gas from the star. At some point in this process, the system begins to shine brightly in X-rays. Then, as the black hole enters the main body of the star, it rapidly consumes stellar matter, blasting gamma-ray jets (magenta) outward and causing the star to explode.  
NASA/LSU/Brian Monroe

“The initial wave of gamma rays lasted at least 7 hours, nearly twice the duration of the longest GRB seen previously, and we detected other unusual properties,” said Eliza Neights at George Washington University in Washington and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “This is certainly an outburst unlike any other we’ve seen in the past 50 years.” 

Neights and other astronomers shared their results in October at the American Astronomical Society’s High Energy Astrophysics Division meeting in St. Louis, Missouri. A variety of papers on the event have been published or accepted, and more are being prepared.

Exceptional burst

Detected about once a day on average, GRBs can appear anywhere in the sky with no warning. They are very distant events, with the closest-known example erupting more than 100 million light-years away.

The record-setting duration of the July burst, named GRB 250702B, places it in a class by itself. Of the roughly 15,000 GRBs observed since the phenomenon was first recognized in 1973, none are as long, and only a half dozen even come close. Because opportunities to study such events are so rare, and because they may reveal new ways to create GRBs, astronomers are particularly excited about the July burst.

Most bursts last from a few milliseconds to a few minutes and are known to form in two ways, either by a merger of two city-sized neutron stars or the collapse of a massive star once its core runs out of fuel. Each produces a new black hole. Some of the matter falling toward the black hole becomes channeled into tight jets of particles that stream out at almost the speed of light, creating gamma rays as they go. But neither of these types of bursts can readily create jets able to fire for days, which is why 250702B poses a unique puzzle.

Seeing light

The Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope discovered the burst and triggered multiple times over the course of 3 hours. It was also detected by the Burst Alert Telescope on NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory, the Russian Konus instrument on NASA’s Wind mission, the Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer on Psyche — a NASA spacecraft currently en route to asteroid 16 Psyche  — and Japan’s Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image instrument on the International Space Station.

This brief animation compares the brightness and duration of a typical gamma-ray burst (yellow) to that of the July 2 outburst (magenta). A typical burst caused by the collapse of a massive star lasts less than a minute, but GRB 250702B’s activity continued for more than 7 hours, making it the longest GRB yet observed.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

“The burst went on for so long that no high-energy monitor in space was equipped to fully observe it,” said Eric Burns, an astrophysicist at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge and a member of Neights’ team studying the burst’s gamma-ray glow. “Only through the combined power of instruments on multiple spacecraft could we understand this event.”

The Wide-field X-ray Telescope on China’s Einstein Probe also detected the burst in X-rays and showed that a signal was present the previous day. The first precise location came early July 3 when Swift’s X-Ray Telescope imaged the burst in the constellation Scutum, near the crowded, dusty plane of our Milky Way galaxy. Given this location and the day-earlier X-ray detection, astronomers wondered if this event might be a different type of outburst from somewhere within our own galaxy.

This visualization illustrates the process of pinpointing the location of the July 2 outburst and its host galaxy. Multiple facilities in space and on Earth, collecting light across the spectrum, guided astronomers to the source.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and A. Mellinger, CMU

Images from some of the largest telescopes on the planet, including those at the Keck and Gemini observatories on Hawaii and the European Southern Observatory’s VLT (Very Large Telescope) in Chile, hinted that there was a galaxy at the spot, so astronomers turned to NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope for a clearer view.

“It’s definitely a galaxy, proving it was a distant and powerful explosion, but it is a strange looking one,” said Andrew Levan, an astrophysics professor at Radboud University in the Netherlands who led the VLT and Hubble study. “The Hubble data could either show two galaxies merging, or one galaxy with a dark band of dust splitting the core into two pieces.”

More recent images captured by the NIRcam instrument on NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope strongly support Levan’s interpretation. “The resolution of Webb is unbelievable. We can see so clearly that the burst shined through this dust lane spilling across the galaxy,” said Huei Sears, a postdoctoral researcher at Rutgers University in New Jersey who led the NIRcam observations. “It’s fantastic to see the GRB host in such detail.”

In late August, a team led by Benjamin Gompertz at the University of Birmingham in the U.K. used Webb's NIRSpec instrument and the VLT to determine the galaxy’s distance and other properties. “The burst was remarkably powerful, erupting with the equivalent energy emitted by a thousand Suns shining for 10 billion years,” Gompertz said. “Amazingly, the galaxy is so far away that light from this explosion began racing outward about 8 billion years ago, long before our Sun and solar system had even begun to form.” 

Ground-based images showing the host galaxy's location
The view at left shows the star field around the host galaxy of GRB 250702B. The image incorporates observations from the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii and the Dark Energy Camera mounted on the Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. Right: A close-up view of the host galaxy taken with the Gemini North telescope. This image, which spans 9.5 arcseconds, is the result of over two hours of observations, yet the host galaxy is barely visible due to the large amount of dust surrounding it. The optical and near-infrared DECam data was acquired on July 3, while the near-infrared Gemini North observations were made July 20.
International Gemini Observatory/CTIO/NOIRLab/DOE/NSF/AURA. Image processing: M. Zamani & D. de Martin (NSF NOIRLab)

A comprehensive study of the X-ray light following the main burst used observations from Swift, NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory, and the agency’s NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array) mission. Swift and NuSTAR data revealed rapid flares occurring up to two days after the burst’s discovery.

“The continued accretion of matter by the black hole powered an outflow that produced these flares, but the process continued far longer than is possible in standard GRB models,” said study lead Brendan O’Connor, a McWilliams Postdoctoral Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. “The late X-ray flares show us that the blast’s power source refused to shut off, which means the black hole kept feeding for at least a few days after the initial eruption.”

Conflicting evidence

Fermi and Swift data indicate a typical, if unusually long, GRB. Spectroscopic Webb observations did not find a supernova explosion, which typically follows a stellar collapse GRB, although it may have been obscured by dust and distance. Einstein Probe saw X-rays a day before the burst, while NuSTAR tracked X-ray flares up to two days after it, and neither is typical for GRBs.

In addition, a detailed study led by Jonathan Carney, a graduate student at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, shows that the host galaxy is very different from the typically small galaxies that host most stellar collapse GRBs. “This galaxy turns out to be surprisingly large, with more than twice the mass of our own galaxy,” he said.

In either of the two most discussed scenarios, the black hole will have eaten the star in about a day.

The first invokes an intermediate-mass black hole, one with a few thousand solar masses and an event horizon — the point of no return — a few times larger than Earth. A star wanders too close, becomes stretched along its orbit by gravitational forces, and is rapidly consumed by the black hole. This describes what astronomers call a tidal disruption event, but one caused by a rarely observed “middleweight” black hole, with a mass much greater than those born in a stellar collapse and much smaller than the behemoths found in the centers of big galaxies.

Webb image of GRB 250702B's star field with host galaxy inset
On Oct. 5, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope gave astronomers their clearest view of GRB 250702B’s host galaxy, which is so far away its light takes about 8 billion years to reach us. It appears within a star field in the densely packed central plane of our own Milky Way galaxy. In the zoomed inset, tick marks indicate the burst’s position near the top edge of the galaxy’s dark dust lane. This location eliminates the possibility that the burst was associated with the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s core. The full infrared image is about 2.1 arcminutes across.
NASA, ESA, CSA, H. Sears (Rutgers). Image processing: A. Pagan (STScI)

The gamma-ray team favors a different scenario because, if this burst is like others, the black hole’s mass must be more similar to our Sun’s. Their model envisions a black hole about three times the Sun’s mass — with an event horizon just 11 miles (18 kilometers) across — orbiting and merging with a companion star. The star is of similar mass to the black hole but is much smaller than the Sun. That’s because its hydrogen atmosphere has mostly been stripped away, down to its dense helium core, forming an object astronomers call a helium star.

In both cases, matter from the star first flows toward the black hole and collects into a vast disk, from which the gas makes its final plunge into the black hole. At some point in this process, the system begins to shine brightly in X-rays. Then, as the black hole rapidly consumes the star’s matter, gamma-ray jets blast outward.

Notably, the helium star merger model makes a unique prediction. Once the black hole is totally immersed within the main body of the star, feasting on it from within, the energy it releases explodes the star and powers a supernova.

Unfortunately, this explosion occurred behind enormous amounts of dust, meaning even the power of the Webb telescope was not enough to see the expected supernova. While smoking-gun evidence to explain what happened on July 2 will have to wait for future events, 250702B has already provided new insight into the longest GRBs, thanks in large part to the constant cosmic monitoring of NASA’s fleet of observatories and instruments as part of the agency’s quest to explore and understand the universe.

The Neights-led gamma-ray paper has been accepted by Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (preprint). The Gompertz NIRSpec paper (preprint) has been submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letters, which published the Carney paper Nov. 26, the O’Connor X-ray paper on Nov. 14, and the Levan paper in August.

The Fermi mission is an astrophysics and particle physics partnership managed by NASA Goddard and developed in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy, with important contributions from academic institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, and the United States. The Swift mission is managed by Goddard in collaboration with Penn State, the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, Northrop Grumman Space Systems in Dulles, Virginia, and partners including the University of Leicester and Mullard Space Science Laboratory in the U.K., Brera Observatory in Italy, and the Italian Space Agency.

Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA and is managed by Goddard. Webb, the world’s premier space science observatory, is a joint mission between NASA, ESA, and the Canadian Space Agency.

NuSTAR is led by Caltech and managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, and the mission operations center is located at the University of California, Berkeley. NuSTAR was developed in partnership with the Danish Technical University and the Italian Space Agency.

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.

By Francis Reddy
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

Media Contact:
Claire Andreoli
301-286-1940
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.

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