News

A FRESH new face in the pub industry has taken over at the helm of a popular Stourbridge pub. Ben James is the new man at the helm of The Swan in Brettle Lane, determined to make sure the favourite ...
A FRESH new face in the pub industry has taken over at the helm of a popular Stourbridge pub. Ben James is the new man at the ...
A real ale fan who has spent more than 40 years on the world's longest pub crawl said a pub near Worcester is one of the very ...
A writer shares their experience eating at The Black Dog pub in Vauxhall, London after listening to Taylor Swift's 'The Tortured Poets Department' bonus track.
The equivalent of 104 Earths per year flows toward the black hole, causing some serious indigestion.
Researchers discovered a large black hole jet from the early universe, and it's reshaping what we know about the early universe.
Astronomers at the University of Hawaii uncovered black hole events so packed with energy, they were the biggest explosions seen since the Big Bang.
But what if black holes didn't always begin with a bang? What if, instead, they started quietly—growing inside stars, which still appear alive from the outside, without anyone noticing?
Astronomical amounts of energy could be extracted from black holes—to build a gigantic bomb, for example. Experts have now implemented this principle in the laboratory ...
Although the black holes themselves are invisible, the clouds of dust and gas around them can get extremely hot and glow brightly, enabling telescopes to ‘see’ the black hole in detail.
Now, about a year later, we know it's the first tidal disruption event—meaning a star being ripped apart by a supermassive black hole—identified at visual wavelengths.
Now, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope have observed a black hole in the act of devouring a star, ripping it apart and creating a huge burst of radiation.