Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Featured Blogs
    • EU Horizon Blog
    • ESA Tracker
    • Experimental Frontiers
    • Josh Mitteldorf’s Aging Matters
    • Dr. Lu Zhang’s Gondwanaland
    • NeuroEdge
    • NIAAA
    • SciChi
    • The Poetry of Science
    • Wild Science
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Space
    • Technology
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

Massive black holes

Artist's impression of a microlensing event caused by a black hole observed from Earth toward the Large Magellanic Cloud. The light of a background star located in the LMC is bent by a putative primordial black hole (lens) in the Galactic halo and magnified when observed from the Earth. Microlensing causes very characteristic variation of brightness of the background star, enabling the determination of the lens's mass and distance. Credit: J. Skowron / OGLE. Background image of the Large Magellanic Cloud: generated with bsrender written by Kevin Loch, using the ESA/Gaia database

Is dark matter made of black holes?

Categories Physics & Mathematics, Space

Comments

  • Jeremy Goff on AI Creates Materials That Could Cut Your Cooling Costs
  • Anthony Daniel Rogan on AI Minds Think Like Ours Through Hidden Mathematical Shapes
  • Swetapadma Panda on Researchers Crack the Code to Simulating Error-Proof Quantum Machines
  • Frank on Time Is The Fundamental Fabric of the Universe, Study Suggests
  • Bill on Time Is The Fundamental Fabric of the Universe, Study Suggests
Substack subscription form sign up

© 2025 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed