Astronomers spotted the largest flare ever released from a supermassive black hole as it snacked on a giant star.
Exploring how black holes may not erase information, revealing exciting possibilities for quantum computers and a deeper theory of gravity.
The Event Horizon Telescope only recently gave us the first images of the environment immediately surrounding a black hole.
For obvious reasons, we do not know what the inside of a black hole looks like. But thanks to theoretical physics, we can ask ...
Analysis suggests that the most luminous burst of light ever detected from a black hole — a fireworks show that was, at its peak, more than 10 trillion times brighter than the Sun — flared up as the ...
Falling into a black hole causes time dilation, infinite visual copies, and eventual destruction at the singularity, with ...
Scientists have spotted the brightest flare yet from a supermassive black hole that shines with the light of 10 trillion suns ...
California scientists spotted the brightest flare ever recorded, shining with the light of 10 trillion suns, from a ...