Topics

Large Magellanic Cloud X-ray signal lost in black hole

27 June 2000

Newton, the European Space Agency’s new X-ray observatory
(April p11), was undergoing routine calibration, imaging a
known, stable X-ray source in the Large Magellanic Clouds,
when all of a sudden, the signal mysteriously
disappeared.

LMC X3 is a well known black hole
candidate and the cut-off in its X-ray emission is entirely
unexpected. X-rays come from the hot gas and dust swirling
around the black hole as it is sucked towards the centre.

CERN Courier Jobs

Events


  • Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type null in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36
    |
    Warning: Trying to access array offset on value of type bool in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36

    Warning: Attempt to read property "name" on null in /opt/app-root/src/wp-content/themes/iopp/modules/bright-recruits-item-events.php on line 36
    33rd Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics 8—12 December 2025 | Tempe
bright-rec iop pub iop-science physcis connect