Most Black Holes Are Cosmic Snackers Instead of Binge Eaters

hubble quasars snacking
Three of these galaxies (top right, bottom left, and bottom right) are normal and show no signs of past collisions, while the top left galaxy's irregular shape suggests it collided with a neighbor, in these photos from the Hubble Space Telescope released June 19, 2012. The galaxies were among 30 in a recent study that found black holes more commonly snack than gorge.
(Image credit: NASA, ESA, and K. Schawinski (Yale University))

Frequent snacking is more common than binge eating for black holes, a new study suggests.

Scientists observed 30 galaxies with particularly active large central black holes, and found that most of these ate their fill through regular small meals rather than a single giant feast.

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