The monster heart of the galaxy containing Earth may not be a supermassive black hole but a ghostly, smooth, orb-shaped object.
Astronomers have long believed that the Milky Way – the galaxy containing Earth – has at its center a supermassive, super-powerful “monster” called Sagittarus A *. But new research by astrophysicist Eduar Antonio Becera-Vergara of the International Center for Relativistic Astrophysics in Italy confirms that Sagittarus A * is not a black hole, but a “shadow sphere”., Remove the “matter” black “- the mysterious, invisible matter that fills the universe.
They call the dark matter of the hypothetical object “darkino particles”. The properties of these particles have helped create a cohesive model of the strange things happening at the center of the galaxy.
Confusing things have happened so far, according to Live Science, if Sagittarus A * is considered a black hole. A massive star orbiting so close to it that G2 approached it, but, oddly enough, was not “swallowed”. This is not the only “passer-by” that Sagittarus A * has overlooked. It is unlikely that a supermassive black hole with a strong gravitational pull would have such “behavior”.
According to the team, the dark sphere is indeed strong, but “softer” than the black hole. A star can be crammed into a gas cloud around it, but the star’s gravity is still enough to keep the stellar structure intact and exit the trip safely.
They also point to another lofty hypothesis: Supermassive black holes aren’t really black holes, but just a fuzzy mass of dark matter. It interacts with foreign objects and is invisible like a black hole, but not an all-consuming “monster”.
Many other scientists believe that the black hole monster Sagittarus A * is not aggressive simply because it hibernates.