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Ten years later, LIGO is a black-hole hunting machine

LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA celebrate the anniversary of the first detection of gravitational waves and announce verification of Stephen Hawking’s black hole area theorem.

This illustration portrays GW250114, a powerful collision between two black holes recently observed in gravitational waves. Ten years after LIGO’s landmark detection of the first gravitational waves, the observatory’s improved detectors allowed it to “hear” this celestial collision with unprecedented clarity. Though only LIGO was online during GW250114, it now routinely operates as part of a network with other gravitational-wave detectors, including Europe’s Virgo and Japan’s KAGRA.
This illustration portrays GW250114, a powerful collision between two black holes recently observed in gravitational waves. Ten years after LIGO’s landmark detection of the first gravitational waves, the observatory’s improved detectors allowed it to “hear” this celestial collision with unprecedented clarity. Though only LIGO was online during GW250114, it now routinely operates as part of a network with other gravitational-wave detectors, including Europe’s Virgo and Japan’s KAGRA.
Image credit: Aurore Simonnet (SSU/EdEon)/LVK/URI
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
By MIT News