Several black holes have been discovered in our Milky Way galaxy. At the galaxy’s heart is a dormant one 4.2 million times larger than the Sun
The black holes at the center of the Milky Way (Earth’s home galaxy) and Andromeda (one of our closest galactic neighbors) are among the quietest eaters in the universe. What little light they emit varies subtly in brightness, suggesting that they consume a small but steady stream of matter rather than large clumps. The streams approach the black hole gradually and in a spiral, like water swirling down a drain.