‘Rogue black holes’ might be neither ‘rogue’ nor ‘black holes’
Millions of invisible black holes float freely around our galaxy. Now astronomers think they can spot them. When a star 20 times as massive as our sun dies, it can explode in a supernova and squeeze back down into a dense black hole (with gravity’s help). But that explosion is never perfectly …
Joshua Abrahams flipped this story into Our Planet, Science, Medicine, Mathematics, The Economy, Technology, Animals, the Environment & Space•661d
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