The universe will have the largest ever explosion of two black holes

According to astronomers' research, the universe will have an unprecedented big explosion of two supermassive black holes that orbit each other.

Two super-black holes orbiting each other can lead to a terrible explosion

According to news reports on the site, a pair of giant black holes orbiting each other at the center of a distant galaxy will most likely lead to a huge collision. This is probably the biggest explosion in the universe.

This pair of black holes rotates in a space not much larger than our solar system. Astronomers studying these black holes say they expect to collide once every 1 million years, causing explosions 100 million times larger than a supernova explosion .

Picture 1 of The universe will have the largest ever explosion of two black holes
These two giant black holes may cause the biggest explosion in the universe.

This pair of black holes called PG 1302-102 was first discovered in January this year when astronomers noticed an unusual ray of ultraviolet light coming from the center of a galaxy. They used ultraviolet light data from Nasa's Galaxy Evolution Explorerer (Galex) and the Hubble Space Telescope to track patterns of light for the past 20 years.

They discovered that the black holes themselves were the objects that emitted this strange light because one of them absorbed more matter than the other black hole, heating the surrounding matter to generate energy. The researchers found that this black hole rotates around another black hole with a 5-year cycle.

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These two black holes will increasingly spin closer together in a spiral to create wavelengths in space and time. Therefore, they hope that by studying the last moments of black holes - within the time frame of the galaxy - will help them find gravitational waves.

This will also help confirm the first theory of gravity proposed by Albert Einstein over 100 years ago. The lighter black hole in this binary pair moves at nearly 7% of the speed of light - about 47 million miles an hour. At this speed, light will become stronger and brighter.