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guro
scat
furry -rating:g

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  • ? rune xiao 228

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  • ? original 1.3M

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  • ? black hole 964
  • ? eclipse 801
  • ? no humans 171k
  • ? outdoors 613k
  • ? scenery 60k
  • ? signature 342k
  • ? sky 493k
  • ? star (sky) 67k
  • ? starry sky 42k

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  • ? chinese commentary 208k
  • ? commentary 1.7M
  • ? highres 6.1M

Information

  • ID: 6268758
  • Uploader: Below273 »
  • Date: about 2 years ago
  • Size: 2.22 MB .png (2204x1240) »
  • Source: pixiv.net/artworks/91505634 »
  • Rating: General
  • Score: 38
  • Favorites: 35
  • Status: Active

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Resized to 38% of original (view original)
original drawn by rune_xiao

Artist's commentary

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  • 星蝕

    Star eclipse

    • ‹ prev Search: eclipse ai:eclipse,0% next ›
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    AGENTOFJUSTICE
    about 2 years ago
    [hidden]

    زیبا

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    Myony
    about 2 years ago
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    Tentatively identifying the object eclipsing the star as a black hole. There's definitely gravitational lensing going on with the light around the eclipsing object.

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    Shinjidude
    about 2 years ago
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    Myony said:

    Tentatively identifying the object eclipsing the star as a black hole. There's definitely gravitational lensing going on with the light around the eclipsing object.

    Pretty sure the thing you're thinking is being eclipsed is not a star, but instead the black hole's accretion disk. There's definitely a black hole here, but if there is a star (in the foreground anyway), it's likely torn apart as part of the disk. The gravitational lensing does weird things like allow you to see the disc behind the star above and below it.

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    Myony
    about 2 years ago
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    Shinjidude said:

    Pretty sure the thing you're thinking is being eclipsed is not a star, but instead the black hole's accretion disk. There's definitely a black hole here, but if there is a star (in the foreground anyway), it's likely torn apart as part of the disk. The gravitational lensing does weird things like allow you to see the disc behind the star above and below it.

    The commentary says "Star eclipse", but yeah there's definitely the accretion disk in the image.

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