-
UK PM denies misleading MPs, says officials hid Mandelson info
-
Tit-for-tat blockades once again cripple traffic in Hormuz
-
Cafu says 2026 World Cup is perfect time for Brazil to win again
-
Erdogan vows new measures after deadly Turkey school shootings
-
Rose to take charge at Bournemouth after Iraola exit
-
Olympic status a massive 'boost' for squash says European champion Crouin
-
Kenyan double-double as Korir, Lokedi defend Boston Marathon crowns
-
Whale stranded on German coast swims off, gets stuck again
-
Iran pulling Hormuz 'lever' to maximum in US standoff
-
Argentine film and theater great Luis Brandoni dies at 86
-
French Open sensation Boisson returns to action after 'most difficult' spell
-
Desmond Morris: from 'Naked Ape' to watching 'Big Brother'
-
Rosenior says Chelsea owners supportive despite slump
-
Oil jumps on Hormuz tensions, stocks retreat
-
Romania legend Hagi eyes 'winning every game' on return as coach
-
Rana stars as Bangladesh down New Zealand to level ODI series at 1-1
-
Real Madrid coach Arbeloa launches stout defence of Mbappe
-
Pope Leo blasts 'exploitation' on visit to resource-rich Angola
-
Amy Winehouse's father loses suit against friends selling her clothes
-
Japan issues warning after 7.7-magnitude quake hits north
-
UniCredit woos Commerzbank shareholders in takeover battle
-
European stocks slide as oil jumps on Hormuz tensions
-
Amy Winehouse's dad loses suit against friends for selling clothes
-
Slovenian liberal Golob fails to form government
-
Elon Musk summoned over French X deepfake probe but presence unclear
-
Tsunami warning as major quake hits northern Japan, shakes Tokyo
-
Rana takes 5-32 as Bangladesh bowl out New Zealand for 198
-
Anthropic says will put AI risks 'on the table' with Mythos model
-
Iran says no plan for US peace talks
-
Iran executes two more members of exiled opposition: group
-
Pope Leo visits Angola's diamond-rich northeast
-
US begins 'biggest ever' Philippines war games in thick of Mideast conflict
-
Bulgaria ex-president wins parliamentary majority
-
US begins 'biggest ever' Philippines war games in thick of Mideast war
-
Anxiety lingers in divided Kashmir a year after shooting attack
-
Hit reality show helps rev up Japan's delinquent youth subculture
-
Oil prices bounce back on Iran war escalation
-
Residents return to ravaged homes months after Hong Kong fire
-
Australia's Green wins playoff for third LPGA LA Championship title
-
Pakistan's military chief takes lead on US-Iran talks in diplomatic blitz
-
Thunder, Celtics open NBA playoffs with big wins, Magic shock Pistons
-
US begins Philippines war games in thick of Middle East conflict
-
Who's Bad? Not Michael Jackson in new big-budget biopic
-
Nations gather for first-ever conference on fossil fuel exit
-
Money, lobbyists, inertia: why fossil fuels are so hard to quit
-
France summons Elon Musk over X probe
-
'Save humanity': Four figures battling it out to lead embattled UN
-
Gilgeous-Alexander, Wemby, Jokic finalists for NBA MVP
-
Israel vows to level homes in Lebanon, counter threats with 'full force'
-
AmeriLife Returns as Medicarians' Title Sponsor, Showcasing the Power of Its Connected Ecosystem
Gravitational waves from black hole smash confirm Hawking theory
Ripples in spacetime sent hurtling through the universe when two black holes smash into each other -- a phenomenon predicted by Albert Einstein -- have confirmed a theory proposed by fellow physicist Stephen Hawking over 50 years ago, scientists announced Wednesday.
These ripples, which are called gravitational waves, were detected for the first time in 2015 by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the United States.
In his 1916 theory of general relativity, Einstein predicted that the cataclysmic merger of two black holes would produce gravitational waves that would ripple across the universe and eventually arrive at Earth.
On January 14 this year, LIGO detected another of these signals from the distant universe.
That is no longer such a surprise.
Scientists in the LVK collaboration -- a vast network of scientists whose facilities includes gravitational wave detectors in Italy and Japan -- now record a new black hole merger roughly once every three days.
However January was "the loudest gravitational wave event we have detected to date," LIGO member Geraint Pratten of the University of Birmingham, England, said in a statement.
- From a whisper to a shout -
"It was like a whisper becoming a shout," added the co-author of a new study in the Physical Review Letters.
The latest event bore striking similarities to the first one detected a decade ago.
Both involved collisions of black holes with masses of between 30-40 times that of our Sun. And both smash-ups occurred around 1.3 billion light years away.
But thanks to technological improvements over the years, scientists are now able to greatly reduce the background noise, giving them far clearer data.
This allowed the researchers to confirm a theory by another great physicist.
In 1971, Stephen Hawking predicted that a black hole's event horizon -- the area from which nothing including light can escape -- cannot shrink.
This means that when two black holes merge, the new monster they create must have the same or larger surface area than the pair started out with.
Scientists analysing January's merger, called GW250114, were able to show that Hawking was right.
- Ringing like a struck bell -
The black holes collectively started out at 240,000 square kilometres wide, which is roughly the size of the United Kingdom.
But after the collision, the resulting mega-black hole took up 400,000 square kilometres -- about the size of Sweden.
The California Institute of Technology said that working out the final merged surface area was "the trickiest part of this type of analysis".
"The surface areas of pre-merger black holes can be more readily gleaned as the pair spiral together, roiling space-time and producing gravitational waves," it said in a statement.
But the signal gets muddier once the black holes start combining into a single new monster.
This period is called the "ringdown phase", because the merged black hole rings like a struck bell -- a phenomenon that Einstein also predicted.
The scientists were able to measure different frequencies emanating from this rung bell, allowing them to determine the size of the new post-merger black hole.
- Kerr theory vindicated -
This also enabled them to confirm the event aligned with another theory, made by New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr in 1963.
Kerr predicted that "two black holes with the same mass and spin are mathematically identically," a feature unique to black holes, Maximiliano Isi of Columbia University said in a statement.
Gregorio Carullo of the University of Birmingham said that "given the clarity of the signal produced by GW250114, for the first time we could pick out two 'tones' from the black hole voices and confirm that they behave according to Kerr's prediction."
Scientists are working to find out more about black hole mergers, with several new gravitational wave detectors planned for the coming years -- including one in India.
M.Thompson--AMWN