[2] The authors favour a scenario in which a white dwarf was shredded by a so-called intermediate-mass black hole. A white dwarf is the small, slowly-cooling core that is left behind after a star like our Sun dies. Intermediate-mass black holes are between 100 and 100 000 times more massive than the Sun. Most known black holes have masses significantly greater or lower than that, and intermediate-mass black holes remain a poorly understood type of object.
[2] The authors favour a scenario in which a white dwarf was shredded by a so-called intermediate-mass black hole. A white dwarf is the small, slowly-cooling core that is left behind after a star like our Sun dies. Intermediate-mass black holes are between 100 and 100 000 times more massive than the Sun. Most known black holes have masses significantly greater or lower than that, and intermediate-mass black holes remain a poorly understood type of object.
This may be not so powerful gamma ray source as expected, considering that it may radiate in one or two narrow beams, which isn't unusual.
Are we sure the death star is not yet operational?
Probably aliens. That's my first thought on articles like this.
My first thought was that if there was any carbon based life around there there isn't anymore.
It would be pretty on-point though, if the way we detected aliens is when they destroyed themselves.
I am sure Avi Loeb will let the media know.