国家地理
A pair of newly-discovered, record-breaking black holes has scientists simultaneously excited and scratching their heads. The massive duo are the largest ever recorded at the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), which was built to detect ripples in the fabric of spacetime caused by the collisions of massive objects. These enormous outliers are challenging theorists to figure out just how they grew to such titanic sizes. Find out what this discovery means for our understanding of black holes at the link in bio. Illustration of two black holes colliding by Mark Garlick, Science Photo Library Computer-simulated image of a supermassive black hole at the core of a galaxy by NASA, ESA, and D. Coe, J. Anderson, and R. Van der Merel (STSCI)
11小时前
In our galaxy?
11小时前
Waiting for the "yo mama" joke
11小时前
Natgeo bringing back the disco. Yaeahhhhhhh
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Did this happen possibly long time ago and we are just seeing it?
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Is this time travel yet?
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Those were just 2 of my ex’s meeting
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@officiallymcconaughey thoughts?
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Do I have to go to work Monday still?
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this huge explosion happens i feel nothing in my bedroom when i sleep
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Cool 🌑 🌑 holes
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It’s called a Coldplay concert
9小时前
Interesting perspective on the White House & US Capitol
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This event was detected on November 23, 2023 but net geo decided to publish it in July 2025
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Allahu ekber...
11小时前
Detected after hundred thousand light tears after 🙂↔️ technicality late