Los Angeles Times

Black hole merger makes a wave

Discovery of tiny smashup could shed light on diversity of cosmic phenomena.

- AMINA KHAN amina.khan @latimes.com Twitter: @aminawrite

LIGO scientists say they have discovered gravitatio­nal waves coming from another black hole merger, and it’s the tiniest one they’ve ever seen.

The findings, submitted to the Astrophysi­cal Journal Letters, could shed light on the diversity of the black hole population — and may help scientists figure out why larger black holes appear to behave differentl­y from the smaller ones.

“Its mass makes it very interestin­g,” said Salvatore Vitale, a data analyst and theorist with the LIGO Lab at MIT. The discovery, he added, “really starts populating more of this low-mass region that [until now] was quite empty.”

Gravitatio­nal waves are ripples in the fabric of space-time that are caused by accelerati­ng or decelerati­ng objects.

They’re extremely difficult to detect, but worth searching for because they allow us to directly study extremely powerful cosmic phenomena — including black holes, which can’t be seen by convention­al means because no light can escape from within the event horizon.

The Laser Interferom­eter Gravitatio­nal-Wave Observator­y, or LIGO, can find black hole binaries — a pair of black holes that are bound by gravity — as they spin toward each other and violently merge into a single black hole.

LIGO consists of two L-shaped detectors with 2.5-mile-long arms, one in Hanford, Wash., and the other in Livingston, La.

When a gravitatio­nal wave passes through the detectors, squeezing one arm and stretching the other, a finely tuned system of lasers and mirrors inside the arms can pick up those infinitesi­mally tiny distortion­s.

Since finding its first black hole merger in September 2015, LIGO has announced the discovery of several more black hole mergers, as well as a merger of two neutron stars — some of which the European Virgo detector picked up as well.

The black hole smashup GW170608 was detected on June 7.

The detectors measured a signal that came from the violent collision of two smaller black holes, about seven and 12 times the mass of the sun, sitting roughly a billion light-years away. The merger left behind a black hole with 18 solar masses; the remaining one sun’s worth of mass was converted into gravitatio­nal waves.

This event was quite small compared with most black hole merger discoverie­s by LIGO (for example, the first pair in September 2015 weighed about 36 and 29 suns, respective­ly). The next smallest was found in December 2015, with black hole masses of 7.5 and 14.2 suns, respective­ly.

As the lowest-mass of LIGO’s black hole finds, GW170608’s lightweigh­t pair is in the same class as black holes that astronomer­s have found indirectly via X-rays and other highenergy radiation.

Those X-rays come from outside a black hole, as all the material in its accretion disc spins around, rubs against other material and heats up, emitting highenergy radiation in the process. That material in the disc is pulled from a companion star that’s gravitatio­nally locked into a binary pair with the black hole.

But astronomer­s have really only spotted X-rays coming from lower-mass black holes, not the more massive ones such as those LIGO is finding.

Why haven’t larger black holes been found producing X-rays? It’s a mystery that researcher­s have yet to figure out, Vitale said. But GW170608 could help bridge that gap.

LIGO is set to start its next observing run in late 2018, and as it finds more black hole mergers, scientists will start to be able to treat them as a population and study their demographi­cs to further probe these questions.

But Vitale said he was also hoping to see something new, beyond black hole mergers and neutronsta­r mergers.

“I would love to find a black hole and a neutron star,” he said.

Such a hybrid merger would allow scientists to study gravitatio­nal waves but would also produce some light that astronomer­s could study with more convention­al telescopes.

“If we see that,” he added, “we’ll learn a lot.”

 ?? LSC / LIGO / Caltech / Aurore Simonnet / Sonoma State ?? A CHART shows all the black hole collisions detected by the LIGO Lab. The newest one, GW170608, is the smallest merger to be discovered. “Its mass makes it very interestin­g,” theorist Salvatore Vitale says.
LSC / LIGO / Caltech / Aurore Simonnet / Sonoma State A CHART shows all the black hole collisions detected by the LIGO Lab. The newest one, GW170608, is the smallest merger to be discovered. “Its mass makes it very interestin­g,” theorist Salvatore Vitale says.

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