A galaxy seems to host two giant black holes, poised to collide in a century
By Daniel Clery , Science. Excerpt: Unusual radio signals could be long-sought smoking gun of galactic mergers. Astronomers routinely see galaxies crashing into each other and combining. But the final phase of these cosmic mergers has long proved elusive: two supermassive black holes, each once occupying the center of its own galaxy, closely circling each other within a single, combined galaxy. Now, researchers say they have found compelling evidence of such a pairing. A distant galaxy seems to be firing off two beams of radiation from its center at different angles—a sign that a pair of supermassive black holes lurks at its heart. The two behemoths—each with a mass as large as 1 billion Suns—seem to orbit each other every 121 days. ...In as little as 100 years...the black holes should collide, shaking spacetime itself in a titanic burst of gravitational waves. That final burst “would be a really fantastic gravitational wave signal,” says team leader Silke Britzen of the Max Planc...