Same black hole can collide with its kin multiple times, lopsided merger suggests
Words by Meghan Bartels © NASA/JPL-Caltech For black holes, a collision doesn’t have to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience. On 12 April 2019, scientists detected a new black hole merger using a trio of gravitational-wave detectors. Astrophysicists have spotted such events before, but something about the signals was different: the two black holes that collided were incredibly unevenly matched, with the larger about three times the size of the smaller.
“This event is an oddball the universe has thrown at us – it was something we didn’t see coming,” said Salvatore Vitale, a physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “But nothing happens just once in the universe. And something like this, though rare, we will see again,…