Manitoba

Manitoba researchers part of team working to unravel mystery of largest black hole merger ever detected

A group of Manitoba researchers were involved behind the scenes of an international effort that this week revealed the first documented case of two massive black holes merging — happily, billions of light years from Earth.

Discovery helps us understand 'where we come from,' says U of M Canada Research Chair in Extreme Astrophysics

An artist's impression of two black holes merging, which can be detected on Earth through the gravitational waves the collision creates.
An artist's impression of two black holes merging, which can be detected on Earth through the gravitational waves the collision creates. (Victor de Schwanberg/SPL)

A group of Manitoba researchers were involved behind the scenes of an international effort that this week revealed how two massive black holes careened into one — happily, billions of light years from Earth.

University of Manitoba astrophysicist Samar Safi-Harb, the Canada Research Chair in Extreme Astrophysics, and her team are collaborators on the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA program, which on Monday published evidence of what Safi-Harb says is "the most massive binary black hole detected to date."

Another surprise from the detection, originally made in November 2023, was the breakneck speed at which each black hole was spinning at the time they crashed together — "close to the maximum possible [speed] allowed by theory," said Safi-Harb, who is also a professor of physics and astronomy at the Winnipeg-based U of M.

"So not just they are massive, they're spinning like crazy — 400,000 times the Earth's rotation speed."

Her team wasn't directly involved in this detection, but they're part of the community of thousands of researchers globally involved in LIGO — the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, which operates detectors in Washington state and Louisiana.

The team includes U of M postdoctoral fellow Nathan Steinle, who specializes in gravitational wave astrophysics and modelling the collision of black holes, while postdoc Labani Mallick works on electromagnetic observations of black holes.

Safi-Harb's PhD student, Neil Doerksen, is focused on improving the sensitivity of detectors used in gravitational wave detection technology, and PhD student Lucas da Conceição works on detection of neutron star gravitational waves.

Studying wild extremes

All five research wild extremes — extreme temperatures, extreme gravity, extreme magnetic fields exhibited by astrophysical systems.

Those just happen to be associated with the deaths of stars — which Safi-Harb is fascinated by because of what they can tell us about where everything comes from.

Stellar explosions lead to the creation of some of the heaviest elements in the universe: the calcium in your bones. That gold engagement ring your grandmother left you. The platinum in the catalytic converter stolen from your buddy's sedan. It all came from a beautiful kaboom in the vacuum of space. 

Two black holes at the centre of thousands of stars, illustrating two black hole mergers.
The collision of two black holes holes, detected for the first time ever by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, or LIGO, is seen in this still from a computer simulation. LIGO detected gravitational waves, or ripples in space and time generated as the black holes spiraled in toward each other, collided and merged. This simulation shows how the merger would appear to our eyes if we could somehow travel in a spaceship for a closer look. (SXS, the Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) project )

The more commonly understood way black holes are born is the collapse when a massive star reaches the end of its life. Its stellar corpse morphs into this mysterious, incredibly dense pack of matter, with gravity so intense not even light can escape.

That basically makes black holes invisible to conventional light-based telescopes, which is why traditional studies have homed in on the indirect effects black holes have on their surroundings.

X-ray telescopes allow scientists to, for example, infer the presence of a black hole by studying the gravitational effects they exert on nearby stars, or by finding materials like gas and dust that forms in disks around black holes. 

But when it comes to hunting for black hole collisions, different tools are needed.

A woman smiles as she rests her elbows on a table.
Samar Safi-Harb is the Canada Research Chair in Extreme Astrophysics and a professor of physics and astronomy at the Winnipeg-based U of M. (University of Manitoba)

LIGO is designed to look for gravitational wave signatures first predicted to exist by Albert Einstein over a century ago.

Einstein's general theory of relativity postulated that these waves rippling through space-time are produced by the motion of accelerating objects. Big, big ones.

"If you throw a rock or a stone into a lake, you observe those ripples," said Safi-Harb. "When you have a black hole, it is so dense that it causes these ripples in space-time."

A building with two long metal arms stretch into an empty, dusty landscape.
Two four-kilometre long arms of the LIGO Hanford observatory in Washington state. (LIGO/Caltech/MIT)

If two black holes orbit one another and get closer and closer, they accelerate, "and that leads to really strong gravitational waves," she said.

Einstein's prediction remained rooted in the theoretical realm until a decade ago, when scientists managed to observe gravitational waves for the first time through LIGO. Scientists now know of 300 black hole collisions, said Safi-Harb.

The latest, dubbed GW231123, is the most massive yet.

WATCH: Scientists detect gravitational waves for first time (2016):

Scientists detect gravitational waves for 1st time

9 years ago
Duration 0:51
Einstein theory proven more than 100 years later

The original pair of black holes had masses 100 and 140 times greater than our sun, and the end product of the merge is in the range of 225 solar masses.

That sounds massive, and it is, but on the spectrum of black holes it may fall somewhere in the middle.

There are three classes of black holes, including those in our cosmic backyard, known as stellar mass black holes. They can be in the order of 10 to 60 times the mass of our sun. 

Then there are the supermassive black holes. They reside at the centres of galaxies and can be millions to billions of times more massive than our sun. Some even have names — the dark heart of our Milky Way galaxy is known as Sagittarius A.

And evidence has emerged in recent years of the third class — intermediate mass black holes — that may fall between hundreds to thousands of solar masses, like GW231123 and the parent black holes that made it.

The sun sets over the horizon.
The product of the collision of the two black holes is in the range of 225 times the mass of our sun. While that sounds massive, on the spectrum of black holes, it may fall somewhere in the middle. (Bryce Hoye/CBC)

The fact the parents, and GW231123, all fall into the in-between-zone is exciting — but also a bit of a head-scratcher.

"These masses are believed to be 'forbidden,' or not expected to happen, because standard stellar evolution does not predict such black hole formation," said Safi-Harb.

It may be that each of those parent black holes were born from mergers of even smaller black holes, said Safi-Harb.

"What this discovery is teaching us is that we know that some smaller black holes can make bigger black holes, and maybe bigger black holes collide to make even bigger black holes, and if these are in dense environments, they can make things like our galaxy," she said.

"So it's understanding our origins, where we come from."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bryce Hoye is a multi-platform journalist with a background in wildlife biology. He has worked for CBC Manitoba for over a decade with stints producing at CBC's Quirks & Quarks and Front Burner. He was a 2024-25 Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT. He is also Prairie rep for outCBC. He has won a national Radio Television Digital News Association award for a 2017 feature on the history of the fur trade, and a 2023 Prairie region award for an audio documentary about a Chinese-Canadian father passing down his love for hockey to the next generation of Asian Canadians.

With files from Nicole Mortillaro