Largest black holes form through repeated mergers in star clusters

New analysis of gravitational wave data indicates that the universe's heaviest black holes arise from multiple collisions inside dense star clusters instead of single stellar collapses.

Researchers at Cardiff University examined 153 black hole mergers recorded in version 4.0 of the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog. Their study, published in Nature Astronomy, identifies two separate populations of black holes. Lower-mass objects match expectations for direct formation from dying stars, while higher-mass ones show rapid spins in random orientations consistent with repeated mergers in crowded environments where stars are packed far more densely than near the Sun.

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A theoretical study proposes that collapsing massive stars may form gravastars rather than black holes by creating miniature universes inside themselves. The model offers the first dynamic explanation for how these exotic objects could arise from ordinary stellar matter.

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Astronomers have outlined a strategy to detect closely orbiting supermassive black hole binaries by searching for repeating flashes of magnified starlight caused by gravitational lensing.

Astronomers have traced a high-energy neutrino to a distant galaxy powered by intense star formation rather than a supermassive black hole. The finding challenges previous assumptions about the origins of cosmic neutrinos.

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Physicists with the STAR collaboration have observed particles emerging directly from empty space during high-energy proton collisions at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The experiment provides strong evidence that mass can arise from vacuum fluctuations, as predicted by quantum chromodynamics. Quark-antiquark pairs promoted to real particles retained spin correlations tracing back to the vacuum.

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