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Black Hole Gobbled Mystery Object

Black Hole Gobbled Mystery Object

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PHOTOGRAPH BY IMAGE BY N. FISCHER, S. OSSOKINE, H. PFEIFFER, A. BUONANNO 
(MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR GRAVITATIONAL PHYSICS), SIMULATING EXTREME
 SPACETIMES (SXS) COLLABORATION

     About 800 million light-years away, a black hole devoured an unidentified object, and the resulting cosmic merger released enough energy to wrinkle the fabric of spacetime. These wrinkles, called gravitational waves, travelled through the universe and eventually washed over Earth on August 14, 2019. Here, three detectors sensitive enough to measure such minuscule perturbations recorded the merger—and as astronomers decoded the information written into the gravitational waves, they confronted an enigma.
File:EnsteinRingZoomOptimised.gif - Wikimedia Commons


      The collision, called GW190814, stands out from the dozens of cosmic mergers detected by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO)—a collaboration involving hundreds of scientists—and its Italian counterpart Virgo. For millions or perhaps billions of years, the two objects orbited one another, spiralling closer and closer until they finally collided. Astronomers determined that one of those objects was a black hole with as much mass as 23 suns. The other, gobbled up whole, was roughly 2.6 solar masses—and it’s a mystery object that defies definition.




      “We haven’t seen, with confidence, anything like this before,” says Vicky Kalogera of Northwestern University, who coordinated the report on the merger, published yesterday in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

        The mysterious object sits right at the tipping point between having a surface, like a star, and becoming a pit of bottomless space-time, aka a black hole. Its mass places it in a murky zone between the heaviest known neutron stars—stellar corpses that are left over after stars explode in supernovae—and the lightest black holes, which form when a stellar remnant is compact enough to collapse into a point of infinite density.

       Scientists are trying to work out where neutron stars end and black holes begin, since that boundary can reveal how matter behaves in the universe's most extreme conditions. And because these exotic objects are the endpoints in stellar evolution, at some point, when all the stars burn out, they may be the only things left drifting through an otherwise vacant universe. That all makes the identity of the odd object seen in GW190814 very tantalising.

-by Pratyay Chowdhury     


this post is written and presented by Pratyay Chowdhury & Abhrajit Ghosh

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