Either the AGN was obscured by dust, or the black
hole slowed its eating around 100,000 years ago, causing its brightness to plunge.
Not exact matches
Study co-author Andrew Blain of the University of Leicester says that a
slow spin may be how this black
hole has sustained its binge, which he calls the equivalent of «winning a hot - dog -
eating contest lasting hundreds of millions of years.»
Study co-author Andrew Blain of the University of Leicester says that a
slow spin may be how this black
hole has sustained its binge, which he calls the equivalent of «winning a hot dog —
eating contest lasting hundreds of millions of years.»
The sea urchins had
eaten holes in all the rocks, although they were
slower at doing so on the harder ones.