A few years ago, astronomers saw for the first time a patch of cosmic darkness long thought to be unseeable – a black hole, a powerful, elusive beast so dense that not even light can escape its gravity. Black holes are known to gobble up anything and everything that ventures close to them – gas, stars, planets and even fellow black holes. But this fuzzy, doughnut-like black hole in the galaxy Messier 87 is slowly breaking black hole stereotypes. For one, it appears to be giving back to the universe by losing energy. Two months ago, this particular supermassive black hole, roughly 55 million light years from Earth, known as Messier 87*, was studied using the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), which combines data from multiple radio telescopes worldwide to make…