Massive black hole merger forms 1 225 times mass of sun
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A new method to analyze gravitational-wave data could transform how we study some of the universe's most extreme events—black holes smashing into each other.
But in the past two decades, new types of black holes have been seen and astronomers are beginning to understand how they form. Called supermassive black holes, they have been found at the center of pretty much every galaxy and are a hundred thousand to a billion times the mass of our sun.