1st detection of ‘hiccupping’ black hole leads to surprising discovery of 2nd black hole orbiting around it

Astronomers have spotted the first known instance of a black hole “hiccup,” from a distant cosmic behemoth. The cosmic belches suggest the swirling disks of matter and gas that surround black holes may be home to bigger cosmic objects than previously thought.

The monster black hole, which weighs the equivalent of about 50 million suns and lives in the heart of a galaxy 800 million light-years from Earth, is ejecting hunks of gas into space once every 8.5 days before going quiet again. These “hiccups” come from the black hole’s accretion disk, a ring of superheated gas that swirls around the object.

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