LIGO/Virgo: GW170608 - Another Black Hole Binary Merger

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bystander
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LIGO/Virgo: GW170608 - Another Black Hole Binary Merger

Post by bystander » Fri Nov 17, 2017 4:53 pm

LIGO and Virgo Announce the Detection of a Black Hole Binary Merger from June 8, 2017
LIGO | Virgo | 2017 Nov 15

Scientists searching for gravitational waves have confirmed yet another detection from their fruitful observing run earlier this year. Dubbed GW170608, the latest discovery was produced by the merger of two relatively light black holes, 7 and 12 times the mass of the sun, at a distance of about a thousand million light-years from Earth. The merger left behind a final black hole 18 times the mass of the sun, meaning that energy equivalent to about 1 solar mass was emitted as gravitational waves during the collision.

This event, detected by the two NSF-supported LIGO detectors at 02:01:16 UTC on June 8, 2017 (or 10:01:16 pm on June 7th in US Eastern Daylight time), was actually the second binary black hole merger observed during LIGO’s second observation run since being upgraded in a program called Advanced LIGO, but its announcement was delayed due to the time required to understand two other discoveries: a LIGO-Virgo three-detector observation of gravitational waves from another binary black hole merger (GW170814) on August 14, and the first-ever detection of a binary neutron star merger (GW170817) in light and gravitational waves on August 17. ...

GW170608: Observation of a 19-solar-mass Binary Black Hole Coalescence - LIGO Scientific Collaboration, Virgo Collaboration
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Re: LIGO/Virgo: GW170608 - Another Black Hole Binary Merger

Post by BDanielMayfield » Sat Nov 18, 2017 12:47 am

Some key points from the paper's abstract:
This system is the lightest black hole binary so far observed, with component masses 12+7−2M⊙ and 7+2-2M⊙ (90% credible intervals). These lie in the range of measured black hole masses in low-mass X-ray binaries, thus allowing us to compare black holes detected through gravitational waves with electromagnetic observations. The source's luminosity distance is 340+/-140 Mpc, corresponding to redshift 0.07+/-0.03.
Just as zero is not equal to infinity, everything coming from nothing is illogical.

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