WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:01.634 --> 00:00:03.837 [Music throughout] Astronomers spotted a black hole 2 00:00:03.937 --> 00:00:06.373 repeatedly munching on a Sun-like star 3 00:00:06.606 --> 00:00:09.976 thanks to NASA's Swift satellite. 4 00:00:10.076 --> 00:00:14.581 When a star gets too close to a black hole, gravitational forces 5 00:00:14.681 --> 00:00:19.119 cause it to bulge and break apart into a stream of gas. 6 00:00:19.219 --> 00:00:23.957 This is a tidal disruption event. 7 00:00:24.024 --> 00:00:25.258 In some cases, 8 00:00:25.258 --> 00:00:29.863 scientists see what they call repeating tidal disruptions. 9 00:00:29.963 --> 00:00:34.834 That's what's happening here with an outburst called Swift J0230. 10 00:00:34.934 --> 00:00:38.805 The Sun-like star orbits a monster black hole. 11 00:00:38.905 --> 00:00:41.908 Every few weeks, the star gets so close 12 00:00:41.941 --> 00:00:46.479 that the black hole pulls off about three Earth masses of material. 13 00:00:46.579 --> 00:00:49.315 But the star survives. 14 00:00:49.315 --> 00:00:52.285 Astronomers saw it in a distant galaxy 15 00:00:52.285 --> 00:00:57.157 Thanks to a new way to analyze data from Swift's X-ray telescope. 16 00:00:57.223 --> 00:01:00.226 They developed a new way of scanning the instrument's observations 17 00:01:00.460 --> 00:01:05.265 so that they can quickly identify and study events like these. 18 00:01:05.331 --> 00:01:06.566 After nearly 19 00:01:06.566 --> 00:01:10.236 two decades in space, Swift is still learning new tricks 20 00:01:10.470 --> 00:01:14.507 and teaching us new things about our cosmos. 21 00:01:14.974 --> 00:01:19.946 NASA