The same black hole can collide with its relatives multiple times, suggests an unbalanced merger



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by black holes, a collision doesn’t have to be a once-in-a-lifetime experience, new research suggests.

On April 12, 2019, scientists detected a new black hole merger using a trio of gravitational wave detectors. Astrophysicists have detected these events before, but something in the signals was different this time: the two black holes that collided were incredibly uneven, the largest being approximately three times the size of the smallest. Scientists did not expect to see such an unbalanced merger between black holes, and now they believe they could understand the unusual event.

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