Did LIGO just see its most important gravitational wave ever?

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John Clark

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Feb 11, 2025, 9:02:51 AM2/11/25
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Last Thursday on February 6 LIGO detected a gravitational wave that originated 1.1 billion light years from the Earth and was caused by either a neutron star neutron star merger or a black hole and neutron star merger; the resulting object was less than five solar masses and possibly less than three. That alone would be interesting because it would be the smallest mass that has ever produced a detectable gravitational wave, but there's more. Less than five minutes after the gravitational wave the IceCube detector in Antarctica saw a burst of neutrinos, and the Chime radio telescope in Canada detected a fast radio burst, neither of those two things had ever been associated with the gravitational wave before. The scientific name for the event is S250206dm.
 

John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
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