• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

This Might Be The First Time We’ve Ever Seen A Gravitational Wave Event Gravitationally Lensed

December 23, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

In just a decade, gravitational wave observatories have changed astronomy. In this short time, we have accumulated hundreds of detections, with many more coming. A wide variety of events have been discovered even among the sub-populations of these cosmic collisions. One record-breaking event has recently been reported, and a new yet-to-be-peer-reviewed paper argues that it might have experienced something unlike any other gravitational wave event. It was magnified.

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

Let’s start with the detection. GW231123 was reported earlier this year as an event that defies our expectations. Based on the data, it was produced by the collision of a black hole, 103 times the mass of the Sun, with another black hole of 137 solar masses, to create a giant of 225 solar masses. The problem is that stars do not produce black holes this big, or at least not anymore.

It could be possible that these are the product of a series of black hole collisions, which raises a question about the environment of these events. The new work argues that our view might have been enhanced somewhat.

Gravity warps space-time. It does so in such a way that a massive body can act like a lens. If this body is in front of some background object, the light of this background object is magnified and warped by the space-time. This is a gravitational lens.

The new paper puts forward the idea that this gravitational wave event was gravitationally lensed by something between it and us. Just like the light of distant galaxies can be magnified by intervening galaxy clusters, so can gravitational waves.



The team found that if the signal is gravitationally lensed, then the final black hole is between 100 and 180 times the mass of the Sun. Still big, but a bit more manageable. This scenario is favored statistically, with a false alarm probability of less than one percent. This is good, but the gold standard of physics demands a much smaller probability.

Still, the first gravitationally lensed gravitational wave event is fascinating. The team estimates that if it truly was a lens, it was a small but dense object, possibly an intermediate mass black hole with a mass of up to 850 solar masses. Collisions of multiple black holes might be what produce these intermediate mass black holes, too.

The 10th anniversary of the gravitational wave discovery felt like a shift in the field. Instruments have been upgraded significantly, and the detections they make are so numerous that researchers continue to pile up new insights and more extreme events. The goal is to massively increase our understanding of black holes – and it’s happening.

The study is available on arXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Hai Robotics picks up $200M for its warehouse robot
  2. Garcia jumps back into action after Ryder Cup letdown
  3. Nuclear Football: Who Actually Has The Nuclear Launch Codes?
  4. 87 Satellites Sent To Space In The Last 24 Hours – Space Is Becoming Ever More Crowded

Source Link: This Might Be The First Time We've Ever Seen A Gravitational Wave Event Gravitationally Lensed

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Want To Know What 2026 Has In Store? The Mesopotamians Have A Tip, But You’re Not Going To Like It
  • Can Woolly Bear Caterpillars Predict Winter Weather? No – But They Do Have A Clever Way To Survive The Freeze
  • Is Showering More Hygienic Than Bathing – What Does The Science Say?
  • Why Is Christmas Called Xmas?
  • Stardust Didn’t Reach The Solar System The Way We Thought, So How Did It Get Here?
  • This Might Be The First Time We’ve Ever Seen A Gravitational Wave Event Gravitationally Lensed
  • Carnivorous, Enormous, And Corpse-Scented: What Are The Rarest Plants On Earth?
  • What Are Nieves Penitentes? The Strange Icy Spikes Found In Some Of Earth’s Most Alien Landscapes
  • What Killed One Of The World’s Biggest Crocs? A Necropsy Of Cassisus Suggests A Hidden Killer
  • Avi Loeb Says Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is “Most Likely Natural” As It Heads Away From Earth
  • For The First Time, Moths Have Been Captured On Camera Feeding On Moose Tears
  • USGS Camera Catches A “Dirty Eruption” At Yellowstone’s Black Diamond Pool
  • This Is Why You Shouldn’t Soak Your Dishes In The Sink Overnight
  • With The Powerful Vera Rubin Observatory, We Could Find Up To 50 Interstellar Objects Like Comet 3I/ATLAS
  • First Evidence For Maternal Care In Plants Reveals Placenta-Like Structure That Sustains Their Offspring
  • “Dragon Man” And “Big-Headed Man” Co-Existed In Prehistoric China 150,000 Years Ago, New Dating Reveals
  • Space Astronomy Is Under Threat As New Paper “Raises Important Concerns” About Megaconstellations
  • New Study Says Cheese Can Protect Against Dementia – Is It Too Good To Be True?
  • Faraday’s Enigma Of Premelted Ice Finally Explained After 166 Years
  • What Is The Smelliest Thing In The World?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version