Astronomers may have spotted an 'invisible' black hole for the first time

This NASA illustration depicts a solitary black hole in space, with its gravity warping the view of stars and galaxies in the background.
This NASA illustration depicts a solitary black hole in space, with its gravity warping the view of stars and galaxies in the background.
(Image credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center; background, ESA/Gaia/DPAC)

Astronomers famously snapped the first ever direct image of a black hole in 2019, thanks to material glowing in its presence. But many black holes are actually near impossible to detect. Now another team using the Hubble Space Telescope seems to have finally found something nobody has seen before: a black hole which is completely invisible. The research, which has been posted online and submitted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, is yet to be peer-reviewed.

Black holes are what's left after large stars die and their cores collapse. They are incredibly dense, with gravity so strong that nothing can move fast enough to escape them, including light. Astronomers are keen to study black holes because they can tell us a lot about the ways that stars die. By measuring the masses of black holes, we can learn about what was going on in stars' final moments, when their cores were collapsing and their outer layers were being expelled.

Adam McMaster
Postgraduate Research Student (PhD) in Astronomy, The Open University

Adam is an astronomy PhD student at the Open University, where he studies black holes and variable stars using citizen science. Before his PhD, he obtained a bachelors degrees in astronomy and computer science from the University of Leicester. He also spent about 10 years working as a computer programmer, including six years with the team behind the Zooniverse citizen science platform at the University of Oxford.