Group 1 - The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration announced the capture of a record-breaking black hole merger event named GW231123, involving black holes with masses of 140 and 100 solar masses, resulting in a supermassive black hole of 225 solar masses [1][2] - This discovery challenges existing stellar evolution theories, as such massive black holes were not expected to exist, suggesting that the merging black holes may have formed from earlier smaller black holes [1] - Since the first detection of gravitational waves in 2015, the collaboration has recorded over 300 black hole merger events, with more than 200 detected during the current observational run from May 2023 to January 2024 [1] Group 2 - LIGO's Executive Director, David Reitze, emphasized that this observation provides a unique window into the nature of black holes, with the merging black holes exhibiting remarkable mass and rotation speeds that challenge current detection technologies and theoretical models [2] - The research team acknowledged that fully analyzing the complex signal may take years, and they are improving analysis methods and theoretical models, with calibration data to be made available to global researchers through the Gravitational Wave Open Science Center [2] - The breakthrough discovery will be formally presented at the 24th International Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation in Glasgow, UK, from July 14 to 18, 2025, potentially sparking new discussions on black hole formation mechanisms [2]
科学家观测到大质量黑洞合并事件
Ke Ji Ri Bao·2025-07-15 10:19