This black-hole collision just made gravitational waves even more interesting0
- Space
- April 24, 2020
An unprecedented signal from unevenly sized objects gives astronomers rare insight into how black holes spin.
An unprecedented signal from unevenly sized objects gives astronomers rare insight into how black holes spin.
A new study pursues a kind of “paleontology” for gravitational waves in an attempt to explain how and why black holes collide and merge.
Astrophysicists at the University of Birmingham have made progress in understanding a key mystery of gravitational-wave astrophysics: how two black holes can come together and merge.