SCOTTISH researchers and astronomers have helped to discover evidence of a star being ripped apart by a supermassive black hole.

Edinburgh University is working with The John Hopkins University in the US and the universities of Durham and Belfast to uncover details of the event for the first time.

Supermassive black holes weigh millions to billions times more than the sun and lurk in the centres of most galaxies, waiting for something to come too close and get torn apart by their powerful gravitational clutches.

Astronomers have spotted this happening before, but this is the first time they have been able to identify the victim as a star.

Research leader Suvi Gezari, of the John Hopkins University, said: "It is like gathering evidence from a crime scene. This is the first time where we have so many pieces of evidence. Now we can put them all together to weigh the black hole and determine the identity of the star that fell victim to it."