Premium Only Content

Two Black Holes Merge into One
eachA computer simulation shows the collision of two black holes, a tremendously powerful event detected for the first time ever by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO. LIGO detected gravitational waves, or ripples in space and time generated as the black holes spiraled in toward each other, collided, and merged. This simulation shows how the merger would appear to our eyes if we could somehow travel in a spaceship for a closer look. It was created by solving equations from Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity using the LIGO data. The two merging black holes are each roughly 30 times the mass of the sun, with one slightly larger than the other. Time has been slowed down by a factor of about 100. The event took place 1.3 billion years ago. The stars appear warped due to the incredibly strong gravity of the black holes. The black holes warp space and time, and this causes light from the stars to curve around the black holes in a process called gravitational lensing. The ring around the black holes, known as an Einstein ring, arises from the light of all the stars in a small region behind the holes, where gravitational lensing has smeared their images into a ring. The gravitational waves themselves would not be seen by a human near the black holes and so do not show in this video, with one important exception. The gravitational waves that are traveling outward toward the small region behind the black holes disturb that region’s stellar images in the Einstein ring, causing them to slosh around, even long after the collision. The gravitational waves traveling in other directions cause weaker, and shorter-lived sloshing, everywhere outside the ring. roughly 30 times the mass of the sun, with one slightly larger than the other. Time has been slowed down by a factor of about 100. The event took place 1.3 billion years ago. The stars appear warped due to the incredibly strong gravity of the black holes. The black holes warp space and time, and this causes light from the stars to curve around the black holes in a process called gravitational lensing. The ring around the black holes, known as an Einstein ring, arises from the light of all the stars in a small region behind the holes, where gravitational lensing has smeared their images into a ring. The gravitational waves themselves would not be seen by a human near the black holes and so do not show in this video, with one important exception. The gravitational waves that are traveling outward toward the small region behind the black holes disturb that region’s stellar images in the Einstein ring, causing them to slosh around, even long after the collision. The gravitational waves traveling in other directions cause weaker, and shorter-lived sloshing, everywhere outside the ring.
-
LIVE
Nikko Ortiz
1 hour agoADHD, Crashouts, and Karens - Rumble LIVE
140 watching -
LIVE
Matt Kohrs
11 hours agoPCE Inflation Report, BTFD & Payday Friday || Live Trading Stock Market Open
598 watching -
LIVE
Wendy Bell Radio
5 hours agoWelcome To The "Find Out" Phase
7,548 watching -
LIVE
GritsGG
48 minutes agoQuad Win Streaks!🫡 Most Wins in WORLD! 3600+
78 watching -
56:54
Crypto Power Hour
1 hour agoSpecial Guest Natalie Brunell, Author & Bitcoin Maxi
8957 -
LIVE
Total Horse Channel
14 hours agoAMHA 2025 World Show 9/26
262 watching -
LIVE
LFA TV
17 hours agoBREAKING NEWS ALL DAY! | FRIDAY 9/26/25
3,103 watching -
1:25:41
Chicks On The Right
4 hours agoComey's FAFO moment, Dallas sniper details, DFWYF, and who to trust in media.
19.4K7 -
DVR
Welcome to the Rebellion Podcast
17 hours ago $1.54 earnedYou Made it to FriJay - WTTR Podcast Live 9/26
16.7K -
1:29:14
Game On!
18 hours ago $2.07 earnedNFL Week 4 Betting Report Preview!
20.9K3