Artist rendering of the light echo of a high-energy flash from a black hole.
 When a star is disrupted by a black hole in the nucleus of a galaxy,
its debris is inevitably attracted and absorbed by the black hole.
 This sudden increase in the accretion rate causes an abrupt burst of
ultraviolet and X-ray light because the gas from the disrupted star 
becomes very hot. As the high-energy radiation travels through the
core of the galaxy it illuminates surrounding matter and so makes it 
possible to probe regions of the galaxy that would otherwise be 
unobservable.
 Credit: MPE/ESA

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