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Scientists Just Found A Black Hole That Shouldn't Exist

Scientists Just Found A Black Hole That Shouldn't Exist

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Astronomers say they've discovered a new record holder for the most massive black hole merger to date. The merger is so big — roughly 255 solar masses — that it shouldn't technically be possible according to our current understanding of physics and black hole formation.
Because of how big the merger is, astronomers estimate that each black hole had to be at least around 100 to 140 times the mass of the sun before the merger. These measurements would put the two black holes in what scientists call the "upper-mass gap," which is a range of masses where black holes aren't believed to form directly from the death of stars, as stars that big typically do not leave behind a stellar remnant.
But the mystery doesn't stop at the size of these two black holes, Mark Hanna, a member of the LVK (LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA) Collaboration from Cardiff University said in a statement. Instead, the researchers note that the black holes are both spinning at 80 to 90% of their top speed, making them the highest spinning black holes that the LVK has ever recorded, too.
Read more: What's Happening To Earth Right Now Can't Be Explained By Climate Models
Finding The Record-Breaking Black Holes
The massive black hole merger was found during the fourth run of the LVK network back in November of 2023. Designated GW231123, the merger is believed to be the most massive black hole binary that humanity has observed using gravitational waves. The LVK is a network of gravitation wave detectors made up of the LIGO, Virgo, and the Kamioka Gravitational Wave Detector (KAGRA). It all began with LIGO's first detection of gravitational waves in 2015, and since then, the three detector systems have helped detect and catalogue thousands of black holes, neutron star mergers, and more. Some hope that gravitational waves could even let us see into black holes in the future.
The details of this latest finding are currently available in a preprint study released on the arXiv server, but Mark Hannam says that "black holes this massive are forbidden through standard stellar evolution models," which has added some scrutiny to the discovery. Not only is understanding these black holes and how they formed and merged important to ratifying the discovery, but it could also be important to helping us round out our understanding of black hole formation as a whole.
In fact, scientists have been making quite a few major discoveries as of late, especially when it comes to black holes. Not only have scientists discovered an entirely new class of black holes, recently, but the discovery of this merger could further upend our understanding of the cosmos even more. But that's one of the wonderful things about science. Our understanding and our view of the universe is constantly changing as we unlock new clues and details. The discovery of this massive black hole merger is just another clue that scientists will need to decode and work out.
Read the original article on BGR.
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This drug can turn your blood into mosquito poison
This drug can turn your blood into mosquito poison

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This drug can turn your blood into mosquito poison

Mosquitoes may have just met their match: A prescription drug already used to treat a rare genetic disease in humans can make a person's blood poisonous to insecticide-resistant, malaria-carrying mosquitoes. New research published on July 31, 2025, in Parasites & Vectors found that the same drug, nitisinone, can even kill mosquitoes that simply land on a surface sprayed with the chemical. The findings could open up new avenues to stop the spread of diseases like malaria and dengue, especially as more mosquito populations evolve to become resistant to traditional prevention methods. Whether people will willingly offer their bodies as mosquito blood bait, though, remains less clear. 'This study demonstrates that nitisinone exhibits a novel mode of action distinct from current [insecticides] by specifically targeting blood digestion processes,' the researchers write. Toxic blood Nitisinone is a pharmaceutical drug derived from a toxin naturally found in the Australian bottlebrush plant. Initially intended for use as an herbicide, the drug targets a nonessential amino acid called tyrosine, which plays an important role in producing and regulating hormones. Research in the late 20th century discovered that nitisinone was also effective in treating tyrosinemia type I and alkaptonuria, two rare genetic disorders that impair the body's ability to metabolize tyrosine. The FDA approved the drug in 2002 to treat those suffering from these conditions. But the same process that helps humans metabolize tyrosine also acts as a kind of amino acid sabotage to blood-sucking mosquitoes. Earlier this year, researchers writing in Science Translational Medicine found that mosquitoes that fed on the blood of humans taking nitisinone died within several hours of their meal. And while patients typically take nitisinone in relatively high doses, the researchers found that the toxic effect on mosquitoes occurs even when the drug is taken in substantially lower amounts. The poisoning process blocks an enzyme mosquitoes need to process proteins and amino acids in blood. Introducing nitisinone disrupts their 'bloodmeal digestion' and effectively clogs the mosquitoes' digestive system. In other words, the drug takes mosquitoes' ability to convert protein from human blood—and turns it against them. But the new findings in the Parasites & Vectors study suggest this same poisoning process could also work without having to administer nitisinone to humans. In their tests, researchers exposed several mosquito species to surfaces treated with nitisinone and four other HPPD inhibitors, both before and after the insects fed on a blood sample. According to the study, the mosquitoes absorbed nitisinone through their feet. Over the course of several hours, nitisinone had similar poisoning effects on mosquitoes as it did on those that drank the treated blood. In every case, exposure to nitisinone caused paralysis. All of the affected mosquitoes also darkened in color. While researchers are confident the process works, they still aren't exactly sure why. It remains unclear how nitisinone is absorbed through the mosquitoes' feet or why the other three similar drugs didn't produce the same deadly results. 'This project proved how important it is to think outside the box,' paper senior author and Honorary Research Fellow at LSTM Lee Haines said in a statement. A new tool to fight resistant skeeters As anyone who's tried—and failed—to mosquito-proof their yard with bug spray knows, it doesn't always work. And that's not just a matter of user error: Insecticide-resistant mosquito variants are becoming increasingly common around the world. Some studies suggest that mosquitoes capable of surviving prolonged exposure to current insecticides make up as much as 30 percent of the population. 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Light pollution is encroaching on observatories around the globe – making it harder for astronomers to study the cosmos
Light pollution is encroaching on observatories around the globe – making it harder for astronomers to study the cosmos

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Light pollution is encroaching on observatories around the globe – making it harder for astronomers to study the cosmos

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. Outdoor lighting for buildings, roads and advertising can help people see in the dark of night, but many astronomers are growing increasingly concerned that these lights could be blinding us to the rest of the universe. An estimate from 2023 showed that the rate of human-produced light is increasing in the night sky by as much as 10% per year. I'm an astronomer who has chaired a standing commission on astronomical site protection for the International Astronomical Union-sponsored working groups studying ground-based light pollution. My work with these groups has centered around the idea that lights from human activities are now affecting astronomical observatories on what used to be distant mountaintops. 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A decade ago, the most common outdoor lighting was from sodium vapor discharge lamps. They produced an orange-pink glow, which meant that they put out very little blue and green light. Even observatories relatively close to growing urban areas had skies that were naturally dark in the blue and green part of the spectrum, enabling all kinds of new observations. Then came the solid-state LED lighting revolution. Those lights put out a broad rainbow of color with very high efficiency – meaning they produce lots of light per watt of electricity. The earliest versions of LEDs put out a large fraction of their energy in the blue and green, but advancing technology now gets the same efficiency with "warmer" lights that have much less blue and green. Nevertheless, the formerly pristine darkness of the night sky now has much more light, particularly in the blue and green, from LEDs in cities and towns, lighting roads, public spaces and advertising. 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SpaceX astronauts splashdown safely off Southern California coast
SpaceX astronauts splashdown safely off Southern California coast

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SpaceX astronauts splashdown safely off Southern California coast

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