The Pak Banker

Gravitatio­nal waves from black hole collision detected

- -AP

WASHINGTON: Scientists have yet again detected gravitatio­nal waves-ripples in the fabric of space and time- produced by the merger of two light black holes about a billion light-years away from the Earth.

The waves were produced by the merger of black holes seven and 12 times the mass of the Sun, and left behind a final black hole 18 times the mass of the Sun. This means that energy equivalent to about one solar mass was emitted as gravitatio­nal waves during the collision. This event, detected by detectors on 8 June this year, was actually the second binary black hole merger observed during Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y (LIGO)'s second observatio­n run since being upgraded in a programme called Advanced LIGO.

However, its announceme­nt was delayed due to the time required to understand two other discoverie­s: a three-detector observatio­n of gravitatio­nal waves from another binary black hole merger on 14 August, and the first-ever detection of a binary neutron star merger in light and gravitatio­nal waves on 17 August. GW170608 is the lightest black hole binary that LIGO and Virgo detectors have observed - and so is one of the first cases where black holes detected through gravitatio­nal waves have masses similar to black holes detected indirectly via electromag­netic radiation, such as X-rays.

This discovery will enable astronomer­s to compare the properties of black holes gleaned from gravitatio­nal wave observatio­ns with those of similar-mass black holes previously only detected with X-ray studies, and fills in a missing link between the two classes of black hole observatio­ns.

Despite their relatively diminutive size, GW170608's black holes will greatly contribute to the growing field of "multimesse­nger astronomy," where gravitatio­nal wave astronomer­s and electromag­netic astronomer­s work together to learn more about these exotic and mysterious objects.

The LIGO and Virgo detectors are currently offline for further upgrades to improve sensitivit­y. Scientists expect to launch a new observing run next year, though there will be occasional test runs during which detections may occur.

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