| Scientists: Black hole helps spawn stars(AP)
 Updated: 2005-10-14 09:13
 Astronomers say the 
mysterious, massive black hole in the center of the Milky Way helped give birth 
to new stars, challenging earlier theories that black holes are solely 
destructive forces. 
 Scientists peering through NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory found that disks 
of gas near the black hole actually helped spawn a new generation of stars.
  
 Their observations, announced Thursday, will be published in a future issue 
of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
 "Massive black holes are usually known for violence and destruction," said 
Sergei Nayakshin of the University of Leicester in England, who made the 
discovery. "So it's remarkable that this black hole helped create new stars, not 
just destroy them."
 Black holes are believed to be the invisible remains of collapsed stars with 
gravitational pull so powerful not even light can escape the vortex.
 This Jekyll-and-Hyde nature suggested by the new discovery may help 
scientists understand the physics of black holes, said Sterl Phinney, a 
professor of theoretical astrophysics at the California Institute of Technology 
in Pasadena, who was not part of the study.
 Astronomers believe the gravity of the gas disk helped offset the tidal force 
of the black hole in a tug-of-war that allowed the stars to form.
 Scientists have ruled out the possibility that a star cluster formed far away 
and somehow migrated near the black hole. Some 10,000 low-mass stars formed near 
the black hole. If there had been a migration, scientists surmised they would 
have found at least a million such stars.
 The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy, a cluster of stars with a black hole in the 
center and bending arms spreading out from the core. The solar system, 
containing the Earth and other planets, is on one of the spiral arms.
 
 
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