University of Michigan: Colossal Black Holes Locked in Dance at Heart of Galaxy
February 24, 2022
February 24, 2022
ANN ARBOR, Michigan, Feb. 24 (TNSJou) -- The University of Michigan issued the following news release:
Caught in an epic cosmic waltz, two supermassive black holes appear to be orbiting around each other every two years. A team of researchers has discovered the pair of supermassive black holes caught in the act of merging 13 billion light-years away.
The two massive bodies are each hundreds of millions of times the mass of our sun and span a distance roughly fifty times . . .
Caught in an epic cosmic waltz, two supermassive black holes appear to be orbiting around each other every two years. A team of researchers has discovered the pair of supermassive black holes caught in the act of merging 13 billion light-years away.
The two massive bodies are each hundreds of millions of times the mass of our sun and span a distance roughly fifty times . . .