Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    NordPass Review: An Almost Flawless Password Manager

    November 21, 2025

    Hubble Seeks Clusters in ‘Lost Galaxy’

    November 21, 2025

    Apple Drops AirPods Max to New All-Time Low on Amazon, Rivals Sony and Bose Are Freaking Out

    November 21, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Friday, November 21
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Mastodon Tumblr Bluesky LinkedIn Threads
    ToolcomeToolcome
    • Technology & Startups

      NordPass Review: An Almost Flawless Password Manager

      November 21, 2025

      This Hacker Conference Installed a Literal Anti-Virus Monitoring System

      November 21, 2025

      A Viral Chinese Wristband Claims to Zap You Awake. The Public Says ‘No Thanks’

      November 21, 2025

      The EU made Apple adopt new Wi-Fi standards, and now Android can support AirDrop

      November 21, 2025

      Scientists found the key to accurate Maya eclipse tables

      November 21, 2025
    • Science & Education

      Hubble Seeks Clusters in ‘Lost Galaxy’

      November 21, 2025

      Mysterious galaxy trapped in ‘the void’ keeps churning out stars without fuel. Scientists are stumped.

      November 21, 2025

      See a rare conjunction of Mercury and Venus this month — here’s when and where to look

      November 21, 2025

      Comet 3I/ATLAS gallery: See NASA’s long-awaited images of interstellar visitor

      November 21, 2025

      ‘I don’t know if CDC will survive, to be quite frank’: Former CDC officials describe the disintegration of the agency under RFK

      November 21, 2025
    • Mobile Phones

      The Galaxy S26’s peak brightness numbers might leave you disappointed

      November 21, 2025

      Early Black Friday deal just made the MacBook Air M4 way too tempting – under $750!

      November 21, 2025

      Amazon brings Samsung’s timeless Galaxy Watch 7 down to a ridiculously low Black Friday price

      November 21, 2025

      This early Black Friday deal drops the Nothing Ear to impulse-buy territory

      November 21, 2025

      Amazon just brought back one of its best Apple Watch SE 2 Black Friday discounts

      November 21, 2025
    • Gadgets

      Our favorite budgeting app has 50 percent off subscriptions right now

      November 21, 2025

      Our favorite 2025 advent calendars you can still get now: Top picks from Lego, Pokémon, Funko Pop and more

      November 21, 2025

      The best gaming headsets for 2025

      November 21, 2025

      Three months of Audible is only $3 in this Black Friday deal

      November 21, 2025

      The best Bluetooth trackers for 2025

      November 21, 2025
    • Gaming

      Apple Drops AirPods Max to New All-Time Low on Amazon, Rivals Sony and Bose Are Freaking Out

      November 21, 2025

      Agent 47 Teams Up With Eminem To Kill Slim Shady In New Hitman Update

      November 21, 2025

      Ugreen Dumps Its 65W USB-C Wall Charger With 4 Ports, Now Going for Pocket Change

      November 21, 2025

      This Philips Hue 3-Bulb Pack Hits a New Record Low, Amazon Goes Nuts on Black Friday’s First Day

      November 21, 2025

      Zoopunk Was Used To Demonstrate Generative AI Assets

      November 21, 2025
    • Cars

      Top Benefits of Paint Protection Film for Car Owners

      November 20, 2025

      The 2025 Turning Point: Why the Used-Car Market Is Shifting Towards EVs

      November 20, 2025

      Why You Should Use a UK Specialist for Your Range Rover Engine Rebuild

      November 20, 2025

      How Long Can a Porsche 911 Really Last

      November 20, 2025

      10 Rare Cars We Loved

      November 20, 2025
    • PC Accessories

      The New Framework Laptop 16 Has An Upgradable GPU!

      November 20, 2025

      WhatsApp Skipped A Very Basic Security Step

      November 20, 2025

      Crucial Pro DDR5-6400 CL32 Gaming Memory Review

      November 20, 2025

      Feel The Breeze In Your Hair With The Nitro Concepts Wind Box

      November 19, 2025

      Ye Olde ASUS WRT Router Dost Be A Security Risk

      November 19, 2025
    ToolcomeToolcome
    Home»Science & Education»Record-breaking collision of ‘forbidden’ black holes may finally have an explanation, scientists reveal
    Science & Education

    Record-breaking collision of ‘forbidden’ black holes may finally have an explanation, scientists reveal

    November 19, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Scientists have traced the origins of the most massive black hole merger ever observed, revealing how two “impossible” giants may have formed despite long-standing assumptions that such objects should not exist.

    These black holes were considered “forbidden” because stars of that size were thought to blow themselves apart in extremely powerful explosions, leaving behind no remnant that could collapse into a black hole.

    The new work shows that rapidly spinning, magnetized stars can collapse in unexpected ways, producing black holes inside this forbidden mass range, and setting the stage for the colossal merger event known as GW231123.


    You may like

    The findings also suggest that black holes can form more efficiently than scientists thought, which could transform our understanding of how the universe’s first stars and black holes gave rise to today’s supermassive black holes.

    Why heavy black hole mergers matter

    Black hole collisions have become one of the most important tools for understanding the universe.

    “Black hole mergers allow us to observe the universe not through light, but through gravity — via gravitational waves produced by the distortion of space and time as black holes spiral together and merge,” Ore Gottlieb, a professor at the Center for Computational Astrophysics who led the work, told Live Science in an email. Gravitational waves offer a rare view into regions of space where gravity is so extreme that not even light can escape. From the shape of the signal alone, scientists can infer the masses and spins of the merging objects and reconstruct how they formed.

    These observations test Einstein’s theory of general relativity where its predictions are the most demanding, because the space-time curvature around merging black holes pushes the theory to its limits. Events involving the heaviest black holes also reveal how massive stars lived and died across cosmic time and how early black holes grew into the monsters that sit at the centers of galaxies today.

    Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

    The most massive black hole merger ever detected

    When detectors recorded GW231123 in November 2023, astronomers quickly realized it stood apart. Two enormous objects — roughly 100 and 130 times the mass of the sun — had merged more than 2 billion light-years away. The surprise was that black holes of this size fall into what physicists call the “mass gap,” a range between roughly 70 and 140 solar masses where no black holes were expected.

    Stars in this range usually tear themselves apart through violent supernova explosions, leaving nothing behind. Yet GW231123 housed not one, but two such objects — and both showed signs of spinning at extreme rates. The event involved “two of the most rapidly spinning black holes, indicating a rare formation channel of massive and rapidly spinning black holes, which were not supposed to exist,” Gottlieb said.

    To unravel how such black holes could form, the team created detailed, three-dimensional simulations, starting from the life of an extremely massive star. The model followed a helium core about 250 times the mass of the sun as it burned fuel, collapsed, and formed a newborn black hole. Earlier theories assumed such a star would collapse in one piece, leaving a black hole as heavy as the original core. But the new study shows this is not always the case.


    You may like

    an illustration of gravitational waves

    An illustration of what gravitational waves from a black hole merger would look like, if humans could see them. (Image credit: NASA/C. Henze)

    Solving the impossible

    Gottlieb and colleagues found that rapid rotation changes everything.

    “We showed that if the star rotates rapidly, it forms an accretion disk around the newly born black hole,” Gottlieb explained. “Strong magnetic fields generated within this disk can drive powerful outflows that expel part of the stellar material, preventing it from falling into the black hole.” Instead of swallowing the entire core, the young black hole loses access to much of the surrounding matter as magnetic forces blast material into space.

    This mechanism reduces the final mass of the remnant, pushing it down into the mass gap — a region previously thought unreachable. “As a result, the final black hole mass can be significantly reduced, landing within the mass gap, a range previously thought to be inaccessible,” Gottlieb said.

    The simulations also naturally produced a link between the mass and spin of the resulting black hole. Strong magnetic fields extract angular momentum, thus slowing the black hole while ejecting more mass. Weaker fields leave a more massive, faster-spinning object. This relationship closely matches the properties inferred for the two black holes in GW231123. One would form in a star with moderate magnetic fields, and the other would form in a star with weaker ones, creating a pair with different final masses and spins — exactly what the gravitational wave signal suggests.

    What these discoveries mean for gravity and cosmic history

    Extreme events like GW231123 stretch general relativity to its breaking point.

    “The tremendous curvature of space and time probes general relativity deep in its most extreme strong field regime, enabling us to test whether Einstein’s equations remain accurate when gravity is at its most extreme,” Gottlieb noted.

    If similar events happened frequently in the early universe, they would have shaped the growth of the first black holes. Such mergers “imply that massive black holes can form more efficiently than current stellar models predict,” Gottlieb said. “This would affect our understanding of how the first generation of stars and black holes seeded the supermassive black holes we observe in galaxies today.”

    The team’s work points to a new formation pathway for massive black holes and predicts specific patterns astronomers can search for. “Our work opens a new window to black hole formation within the mass gap, predicting first-generation black holes (without previous mergers) at all masses,” Gottlieb said. Future gravitational-wave detections will test whether the mass-spin correlation found in the simulations holds across many events.

    “As we detect more massive black hole binaries, we will be able to test the predicted correlation on this population,” Gottlieb said. These discoveries may reveal whether GW231123 is a cosmic rarity or the first clear sign of a hidden population of massive, rapidly spinning black holes.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    mehedihasan9992
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Hubble Seeks Clusters in ‘Lost Galaxy’

    November 21, 2025

    Mysterious galaxy trapped in ‘the void’ keeps churning out stars without fuel. Scientists are stumped.

    November 21, 2025

    See a rare conjunction of Mercury and Venus this month — here’s when and where to look

    November 21, 2025

    Comet 3I/ATLAS gallery: See NASA’s long-awaited images of interstellar visitor

    November 21, 2025

    ‘I don’t know if CDC will survive, to be quite frank’: Former CDC officials describe the disintegration of the agency under RFK

    November 21, 2025

    2,000-year-old skull found at Celtic fort was likely a ‘war trophy’ displayed by conquering Romans

    November 21, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    These Galaxy phones were attacked by spyware for nearly a year before a patch was released

    November 10, 202528 Views

    Rumored Verizon decision will let down both customers and employees

    November 7, 202525 Views

    World’s biggest spiderweb discovered inside ‘Sulfur Cave’ with 111,000 arachnids living in pitch black

    November 4, 202521 Views
    Don't Miss

    NordPass Review: An Almost Flawless Password Manager

    November 21, 2025

    NordPass also offers a family plan that comes complete with six accounts; otherwise, it’s identical…

    Hubble Seeks Clusters in ‘Lost Galaxy’

    November 21, 2025

    Apple Drops AirPods Max to New All-Time Low on Amazon, Rivals Sony and Bose Are Freaking Out

    November 21, 2025

    The Galaxy S26’s peak brightness numbers might leave you disappointed

    November 21, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    8.9

    Review: Dell’s New Tablet PC Can Survive -20f And Drops

    January 15, 2021

    Review: Kia EV6 2022 The Best Electric Vehicle Ever?

    January 14, 2021
    72

    Review: Animation Software Business Share, Market Size and Growth

    January 14, 2021
    Most Popular

    These Galaxy phones were attacked by spyware for nearly a year before a patch was released

    November 10, 202528 Views

    Rumored Verizon decision will let down both customers and employees

    November 7, 202525 Views

    World’s biggest spiderweb discovered inside ‘Sulfur Cave’ with 111,000 arachnids living in pitch black

    November 4, 202521 Views
    Our Picks

    NordPass Review: An Almost Flawless Password Manager

    November 21, 2025

    Hubble Seeks Clusters in ‘Lost Galaxy’

    November 21, 2025

    Apple Drops AirPods Max to New All-Time Low on Amazon, Rivals Sony and Bose Are Freaking Out

    November 21, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Toolcome
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • Technology
    • Gaming
    • Mobile Phones
    • Cars
    • PC Accessories
    © 2025 Tolcome. Designed by Aim Digi Ltd.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.