Black holes are some of the most extreme objects in the universe. They are not just “space vacuum cleaners.” When they pull in gas from a nearby star, they create one of the brightest sources of X-rays in space. These systems are called X-ray binaries , where a black hole and a normal star orbit each other, and the black hole slowly feeds on the star’s material. A recent scientific study by Zhang and Thompson tries to explain in detail how these X-rays are produced. Their work focuses on a very hot region around the black hole called the corona , and how it behaves when matter is slowly falling into the black hole. What Happens Around a Black Hole? When a black hole pulls gas from a nearby star, the gas does not fall straight in. Instead, it forms a spinning disk around the black hole called an accretion disk . This disk becomes extremely hot as it gets closer to the black hole. The inner region of the disk gives off low-energy (soft) X-rays. But telescopes also detect very high-energy...