'Runaway' black hole detected by the James Webb telescope adds a strange new chapter to our universe's story

Recent observations suggest that 'runaway' black holes are tumbling through the cosmos. Building on decades of theory, the discovery adds a remarkable new chapter to the story of the universe.

An annotated image of a runaway black hole leaving a streak of new stars in its wake.
A runaway black hole leaving a streak of new stars in its wake.
(Image credit: James Webb Space Telescope / van Dokkum et al.)

Last year, astronomers were fascinated by a runaway comet passing through our solar system from somewhere far beyond. It was moving at around 68 kilometres per second, just over double Earth's speed around the Sun.

Imagine if it had been something much bigger and faster: a black hole travelling at more like 3,000 km per second. We wouldn't see it coming until its intense gravitational forces started knocking around the orbits of the outer planets.

David Blair
Emeritus Professor, ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery, OzGrav, The University of Western Australia

David Blair is an emeritus professor of physics at the University of Western Australia and member of Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav). He leads an international project aiming to introduce Einsteinian concepts into school education at an early age.

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