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Space Science

Scientists Excited By Discovery of an Impossibly Large Black Hole (theatlantic.com) 41

In 2017 several scientists co-signed a wager at the Aspen Center for Physics that a black hole wouldn't be discovered between 55 and 130 solar masses.

They may have lost, reports the Atlantic: Black-hole physicists have been excitedly discussing reports that the LIGO and Virgo gravitational-wave detectors recently picked up the signal of an unexpectedly enormous black hole, one with a mass that was thought to be physically impossible. "The prediction is no black holes, not even a few" in this mass range, wrote Stan Woosley, an astrophysicist at the University of California at Santa Cruz, in an email. "But of course we know nature often finds a way...."

Whereas most of the colliding black holes that wiggle LIGO's and Virgo's instruments probably originated as pairs of isolated stars (binary star systems being common in the cosmos), MIT's Carl Rodriguez and his co-signers argued that a fraction of the detected collisions occur in dense stellar environments such as globular clusters. The black holes swing around in one another's gravity, and sometimes they catch one another and merge, like big fish swallowing smaller ones in a pond. Inside a globular cluster, a 50-solar-mass black hole could merge with a 30-solar-mass one, for instance, and then the resulting giant could merge again. This second-generation merger is what LIGO/Virgo might have detected -- "a lucky catch of the big fish in the pond.

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Scientists Excited By Discovery of an Impossibly Large Black Hole

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday August 31, 2019 @03:43PM (#59144514)

    The wording of the title implies that this black hole is too big to exist - but we all know that black holes can get way, WAY bigger than that.

    What’s actually going on here is - current theories regarding how black holes form do not provide a mechanism for the formation of black holes with mass roughly between 50 and 130 solar masses. They can be bigger than that, and they can be smaller than that - but there’s no theoretical explanation for how a black hole within that range can form.

    • It's like a title of a Doctor Who episode, isn't it?
    • What happens if one is 49.999999 and a gnat's cock solar masses - and then swallows something like the sun?

      • What happens if one is 49.999999 and a gnat's cock solar masses - and then swallows something like the sun?

        I don't know, but if it were possible you could ask TON 618 at somewhere around 66 billion solar masses, it would know. Of course, it's over 10 billion light years away as well.

        https://youtu.be/dx53GHSHrSA [youtu.be]

        As far as any "near" (LOL) us, there's Holmberg 15A which is pretty impressive.

        https://youtu.be/KQcLRMuqkvQ [youtu.be]

        Our understanding of super-massive black holes and other super-massive objects is still very much a work in progress. There's the fact that due to how long light takes to reach us, the observable univ

    • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Saturday August 31, 2019 @04:20PM (#59144592)
      Yea, The unconfirmed detection was supposedly around 100 solar masses. Considering super massive black holes top out just under 10 billion solar masses, it's around a hundred million times less mass than the actual impossibly large ones we know are possible. It will be neat to see how many there are in that mass range where formation is thought to not occur. This new type of astronomy is neat, and when we have an entirely new type of detector I'd also bet on being surprised because that seems to be the norm.
    • They can form from collapsing star cores bigger than that and smaller than that.
  • by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Saturday August 31, 2019 @03:47PM (#59144522)

    Scientist 1: We discovered an impossibly large black hole!
    Scientist 2: We're all going to die!
    Scientist 3: This is exciting, isn't it?

  • ...I'll keep following through.

    And he said, "The man is like a wise fisherman who cast his net into the sea and drew it up from the sea full of small fish. Among them the wise fisherman found a fine large fish. He threw all the small fish back into the sea and chose the large fish without difficulty. Whoever has ears to hear, let him hear."

    Maybe a co-incidence. Not a coincidence, a co-incidence.
    • He threw all the small fish back into the sea and chose the large fish without difficulty.

      Wouldn't that just exert selective pressure on the fish to grow slowly, reproduce early, and remain small?

      Sure, you have a big fish to eat today, but generations to come will have fewer and fewer if you engage in unsustainable fishing practices.

      • by Empiric ( 675968 )

        The scale of a select few eating whatever they like isn't going to stop the ecosystem.

        In any case, the large fish doesn't have fins, or scales. And it isn't in our ecosystem.

  • Pluto's not a planet, and now this.

  • don't you mean an "impossibly medium" black hole?

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Saturday August 31, 2019 @04:16PM (#59144588) Homepage

    This is another good example of what's great about science and the culture of science. Responding to finding something that seemed impossible not with worry or denial, but "Hey! That's cool!"

    Since summary doesn't discuss why this was something they thought, I'd had to go and read TFA. According to that article, stars in this range actually won't be likely to form black holes. The very biggest are expected to engage in pair-instability supernova https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pair-instability_supernova [wikipedia.org], a sort of supernova which completely destroys the star and spreads things out rather than crunching the core in. Thus, in this mid range, black holes shouldn't form directly. These black holes were likely formed by smaller black holes merging to produce black holes in this rage.

    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      So how do you get black holes bigger than 130 solar masses

      I think the SMBH's were formed very early in the universe, but I haven't heard hpw.

  • Someone had to say it...

  • "between 55 and 130 solar masses."

    Where does the 130 come from? Apart from the current observation, were they thinking that two 50 solar mass black holes couldn't combine to create a 100 SM one? A 54 SM one could only combine with one of 77+ SM? It doesn't make sense.
    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      " were they thinking that two 50 solar mass black holes couldn't combine to create a 100 SM one?"

      I think you would lose maybe 5 SM during the merger (emitted as gravity waves that we pick up on the LIGO )

      But I don't know where the 130 figure comes from - maybe they dpotted one of that size already.

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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