Scientists have used data from the loudest black hole merger ever detected to test Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, finding it holds true with remarkable precision. The 2025 event, known as GW250114, provided the clearest gravitational wave signal to date. This breakthrough builds on previous tests and highlights ongoing advancements in detection technology.
In 2025, an international team of gravitational wave detectors, including the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the United States and the Virgo detector in Italy, captured a powerful ripple in space-time dubbed GW250114. This signal, likely from the merger of two black holes, marked the loudest collision recorded, offering unprecedented clarity due to improved detector sensitivity since LIGO's first detection in 2016.
The event's noise-free data first allowed researchers to verify Stephen Hawking's 50-year-old theorem last year, confirming with nearly 100 percent confidence that a merged black hole's event horizon is not smaller than the combined horizons of its predecessors.
Building on this, Keefe Mitman at Cornell University in New York and his colleagues analyzed the merger's aftermath. According to Einstein's equations, the black holes would spiral inward at accelerating speeds, collide in a burst of energy, and then vibrate in specific 'ringdown modes,' akin to a struck bell. For the first time, GW250114's intensity made these faint modes detectable.
Simulations of Einstein's predictions matched the observed frequencies closely. 'The amplitudes that we measure in the data agree incredibly well with the predictions from numerical relativity,' Mitman said. 'Einstein’s equations are really hard to solve, but when we do solve them and we observe predictions of general relativity in our detectors, those two agree.'
Laura Nuttall at the University of Portsmouth in the UK added, 'The upshot is Einstein is still correct. Everything seems to look like what Einstein says about gravity.'
Limitations persist: the team could not exclude deviations from Einstein's predictions below about 10 percent, owing to current detector sensitivities. Mitman noted that future enhancements could narrow these error bars, potentially revealing discrepancies if general relativity falters under extreme conditions. The findings appear in Physical Review Letters (DOI: 10.1103/6c61-fm1n).