Events immediately preceding a powerful collision between two black holes, which was observed in gravitational waves by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s LIGO, are depicted in this image released on Sept. 9.
15:54 JST, October 4, 2025
WASHINGTON (Reuters) — The merger of two black holes is a momentous event, revealing the wildest and most extreme configurations of space, time and gravity known to science.
Researchers have now gotten their best look yet at such an event based on the detection of ripples in space-time called gravitational waves in an observation that lends strong support to hypotheses from eminent physicists Albert Einstein and Stephen Hawking.
The collision occurred 1.3 billion light-years from Earth in a galaxy beyond our Milky Way, and involved two black holes — one about 34 times the mass of the sun and the other about 32 times the sun’s mass. They merged in a fraction of a second after orbiting each other at nearly the speed of light, and left behind a single black hole around 63 times the mass of the sun that was spinning at approximately 100 revolutions per second.
Black holes are extraordinarily dense objects with a gravitational pull so strong not even light can escape.
The merger unleashed a tremendous amount of energy that radiated outward as gravitational waves, an amount equivalent to pulverizing three sun-sized stars. These waves were detected on Jan. 14 at research sites in Hanford, Wash., and Livingston, La., that are part of the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO.
These observations came about a decade after the groundbreaking first detection of gravitational waves, which were produced by a similar merger. Technological improvements since 2015 meant this merger was observed with four times better resolution than the prior one.
Gravitational waves propagate outward from a source like ripples in a pond. In this case, the pond is space-time, the four-dimensional fabric that combines the three dimensions of space — height, width and length — with the dimension of time.
“Thanks to Albert Einstein, we know that space and time are intertwined and are best thought of as facets of a single entity, space-time,” said astrophysicist Maximiliano Isi of Columbia University and the Flatiron Institute, one of the leaders of the study published on Sept. 10 in the journal Physical Review Letters.
“This manifests, for example, in that time flows at different rates depending on where you are: close to a heavy object, like a black hole, time flows more slowly compared to someone farther away, so that someone close to a black hole would age more slowly,” Isi said.
The researchers analyzed the frequencies of the detected gravitational waves to discern fundamental qualities of the black holes immediately before and after the merger. While these frequencies were not sound waves, the researchers compared them to the ringing of a bell.
“This is just like trying to figure out what a bell is made out of from the ringing sound it makes when struck,” Isi said.
A large iron bell, for instance, makes a different sound than a small aluminum bell.
What the researchers learned based on the frequency of gravitational waves offered validation for a basic tenet of scientific understanding of black holes advanced by Hawking, who died in 2018.
Hawking hypothesized that the total surface area of black holes — specifically the surface area of the event horizon, the boundary beyond which nothing can escape — should never decrease. His hypothesis implies that the surface area of the single black hole produced in a merger should exceed the combined surface areas of the two black holes that merged.
This merger met that expectation. Before colliding, the black holes together had a total surface area of about 240,000 square kilometers. The single black hole produced by the merger had a surface area of about 400,000 square kilometers.
“This is the first time that we have been able to make this measurement so precisely, and it’s exciting to have direct experimental confirmation of such an important idea about the behavior of black holes,” said astrophysicist Will Farr of Stony Brook University and the Flatiron Institute, one of the study leaders.
The observations also provided the most direct evidence yet that black holes are the paradoxically simple objects foreseen in Einstein’s theory of general relativity, which holds that gravity results from the curvature of space-time caused by mass and energy.
The findings validated Einstein’s proposed simplicity of black holes — that they can be fully understood based exclusively on their mass and spin — as worked out by mathematician Roy Kerr in 1963.
The gravitational wave measurements were obtained in a remarkably short time. Caltech astrophysicist Katerina Chatziioannou said the black holes were observed spiraling inward toward each other for about 200 milliseconds, and the signal from the merged black hole was measured for about 10 milliseconds.
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