'No one has ever seen anything like this before.'
Back in October 2018, the Center for Astrophysics team observed a black hole some 665 million light years from Earth eat a star that had gotten a little too close.
But three years later, the same team of researchers watched the star's remains get regurgitated — an outflow of material that's traveling at half the speed of light, per their calculations. It must have been a spectacular sight, watching one of these "messy eaters" emit liquified stars years after the fact — and at five times the regular speed of normal TDEs to boot.
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