The demise of N6946-BH1, from red supergiant to failed supernova to black hole.
The demise of N6946-BH1, from red supergiant to failed supernova to black hole. NASA/ESA/P. Jeffries

N6946-BH1 had a long, glowing life. A red supergiant star that hung in a spiral galaxy 22 million light years away from the Milky Way, it was 25 times the size of the Earthā€™s sun, and blazed about 100,000 times more brightly.

Astronomers would have expected a star of its size to have an appropriately dramatic death. Many massive stars go out as supernovaeā€”enormous explosions that catapult heat, elements, and cosmic rays into space. In 2009 scientists watched as N6946-BH1 seemed to gear up for its big moment. For a few months, it ā€œshot up in brightness to become over 1 million times more luminous than our sun,ā€ Phys.org reports. A spectacular supernova seemed to be approaching.

And then ā€¦ it simply vanished. By 2015, the Hubble and Spitzer telescopes couldnā€™t see it, nor could they detect any radiation coming from where it once was.

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Before and after the death of N6946-BH1.
Before and after the death of N6946-BH1. NASA/ESA/C. Kochanek

In the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a team of researchers that monitors 27 galaxies for supernovae offered up their diagnosis: N6946-BH1 was a so-called ā€œmassive fail,ā€ an enormous star that, despite its size, collapsed into a black hole with no extra fanfare. In the seven years the team has scanned the sky for supernovae, itā€™s the only star they have seen this happen to.

N6946-BH1 may have faded away rather than burned out, but its death sheds some light on a longtime mystery: Why the rate of observable supernovae doesnā€™t match the likely rate of massive star deaths. ā€œThe typical view is that a star can form a black hole only after it goes supernova,ā€ Christopher Kochanek, the studyā€™s lead author, told Phys.org.

If it can reach the same state through less dramatic means, he says, ā€œthat would help to explain why we donā€™t see supernovae from the most massive stars.ā€ After millennia of shining, maybe some stars just want to rest.

Every day, we track down a fleeting wonderā€”something amazing thatā€™s only happening right now. Have a tip for us? Tell us about it! Send your temporary miracles to cara@atlasobscura.com.