Rare

Plasma and electricity in space. Failure of gravity-only cosmology. Exposing the myths of dark matter, dark energy, black holes, neutron stars, and other mathematical constructs. The electric model of stars. Predictions and confirmations of the electric comet.
BeAChooser
Posts: 1052
Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2015 2:24 am

Rare

Unread post by BeAChooser » Sat Nov 19, 2022 8:09 pm

https://phys.org/news/2022-11-simulatio ... nning.html
A team of researchers from Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Università di Torino and INFN sezione di Torino, has found evidence that the black hole collision that led to an odd gravitational wave detection in 2019 was due to a unique set of circumstances.
Now other sources describe that this way …

https://arstechnica.com/science/2022/11 ... encounter/
researchers are now suggesting it was the product of something that should be incredibly rare: two black holes finding each other in the vastness of space. After a single close pass, the two bodies curved around and immediately swung into a collision.
Now think about that folks.

They barely got their so-called gravitational wave detectors built and they've already found something “incredibly rare”.

How lucky are they?

And apparently finding rare is the norm for these folks.

Remember just about a month ago, an “impossibly rare” collision of 2 black hole created a huge release of energy (https://futurism.com/the-byte/black-hol ... surprising). Another source (https://www.businessinsider.com/nasa-de ... le-2022-10) quoted astronomer Yvette Cendes saying "It's a very unique event." She went on to say that a giant gamma-ray burst in a galaxy so close to us is "incredibly, incredibly rare."

Here’s another “incredibly rare phenomenon” (according to https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technolo ... r-AA13Y7HS), the spaghettification of a star by a black hole … reported just 5 days ago. Not only was the event rare but the “intermediate sized” black hole that supposedly caused this is said to be rare as well.

And just a month ago they discovered a “rare” red quasar within a massive black hole (https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 ... 130235.htm), as well.

All I can say is we must be really lucky to be living … and looking … at just the right moment to observe all these extraordinarily rare events.

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