LIGO black hole pair may be stars that lived and died together0
- From Around the Web, Space
- June 22, 2016
The recent spate of gravitational waves may come from pairs of stars that were lifelong companions.
The recent spate of gravitational waves may come from pairs of stars that were lifelong companions.
In the spring of 2012, when I was living near the coastal village of Sechelt, on British Columbia’s picturesque Sunshine Coast, I began hearing a humming sound, which I thought were float planes.
A slice from the 4.5-billion-year-old Allende meteorite. This rock was formed along with the solar system.
Scientists and Astronomers have witnessed an amazing event of a star being ripped apart by a black hole, and they were able to observe and study this special class of black holes in full detail for the first time.
STORY NEVER TOLD – til now~! TOP SECRET!
An Alaskan witness was prepping her kids for a haunted house when they were visited by another paranormal activity.
The mountainous, misty Sichuan Province, also known as “The Land of Abundance”, is one of the birthplaces of Chinese civilization, and home to numerous anomalies, ancient mysteries, cryptozoology, and paranormal phenomena.
While monitoring a star barely two million years old called V830 Tau, located in the Taurus stellar nursery some 430 light years away, that an international team of astronomers discovered the youngest known hot Jupiter.
Emily was only a few feet away from the beings and believes she was given messages.
The FBI’s use of facial recognition technology is exploding, according to a new report from the Government Accountability Office — and its growth is largely unchecked, unaudited, and possibly flawed.