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This is Scientific American 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz. Got a minute?

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Two remarkable things about a giant black hole called RX J1131 at the center of a galaxy some 6 billion light years away.

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One: it's the farthest black hole to have its spin measured.

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Two: it's spinning at half the speed of light.

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That's according to a report in the journal Nature.

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Astronomers have wondered, do large black holes grow gradually via steady intake of material;

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or quickly, for example, in a merger with another black hole during a galactic collision.

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Spin offers clues.

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If the merger idea is correct, lots of new material flowing in a single direction feeds a black hole, driving the spin faster one way.

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But a black hole that ate small meals from different directions would receive tiny pushes that cancel each other, and leave the black hole spinning slowly.

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The half-the-speed-of-light-fantastic being tripped by this newly analyzed black hole thus suggests it grew by digesting another black hole in a galaxy merger.

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Our own Milky Way's black hole could be in for a similar fate when we collide with our neighbor, the Andromeda Galaxy.

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Relax, it's not for another four billion years.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Space. I'm Clara Moskowitz.

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