Astronomers Detect 36-Billion-Solar-Mass Black Hole Through Cosmic Lens

Published : Aug 11, 2025, 03:47 PM IST

An ultra-massive black hole, 36 billion times the Sun’s mass, hides in the Cosmic Horseshoe galaxy 5 billion light-years away, unveiled by a perfect Einstein Ring and precise stellar motion measurements.

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The Cosmic Horseshoe Unveiled

Deep in space, 5 billion light-years away, lies a strange sight — a perfect ring of light shaped by the immense gravity of a hidden black hole.

DID YOU KNOW ?
Black Hole’s Hidden Ring
A perfect Einstein Ring has revealed one of the largest black holes ever found — 36 billion times the Sun’s mass.
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The Biggest Ever?

Astronomers believe this could be the most massive black hole ever measured — a staggering 36 billion times the Sun’s mass, pushing the limits of what’s possible in the universe.

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A Lens Made of Spacetime

The black hole’s home galaxy bends and warps the light of a more distant galaxy, creating an enormous “Einstein Ring” — a cosmic magnifying glass predicted by Einstein’s theories.

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How They Found It

By combining two powerful techniques — gravitational lensing and stellar kinematics — scientists measured both how the black hole bends light and how it speeds up stars around it.

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A Silent Giant

This black hole isn’t actively devouring material right now. Instead, its presence is revealed only by its powerful gravity and the way it shapes its galaxy.

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A Galaxy’s Endgame

The host galaxy is a “fossil group,” the result of many galaxies merging into one. Over time, their central black holes also combined, forming today’s ultramassive monster.

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Why It Matters

Studying these rare giants helps astronomers understand how galaxies and black holes grow together — and how they eventually shut down star formation.

Looking Ahead

With this new measuring method, scientists can now detect other dormant giants across the cosmos, opening a new chapter in the study of the universe’s biggest black holes.

Source: University of California, Berkeley / Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

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