Not exact matches
The detector's latest
discovery means we are now firmly in a new era of astronomy — it matches up convincingly with what we already know
about black holes
Chandra X-ray Observatory Center Background
about earlier
discovery of x-rays from galaxy's
black hole Technical report on previous Chandra observations of Sagittarius A * NASA article on x-ray flare
Since then, its
discoveries have starred in ScienceNOW stories
about gamma ray bursts at the fringes of the galaxy (24 April 1998), gamma ray bursts possibly spawned by
black holes (15 June 1998), and gamma ray bursts that appear to lack gamma rays (20 October 1999), among others.
Lately scientists» excitement has grown thanks to well - publicized rumors
about a
discovery — some specific (detection of a
black hole merger), some not so much.
Some models necessarily predict the existence of primordial
black holes, so their
discovery could help unlock important clues
about the universe's early days,» says Tanaka.
Those
discoveries would allow us to learn more
about the phenomena, such as supernovae and colliding
black holes, that generate the waves.