Friday, June 02, 2017

The recent 2017 Black hole merger (LIGO GW 170104) seems to Fill the gap.

Could LIGO project also be the start to explain Gamma Ray Bursts of small black holes?
The recent 2017 Black hole merger (GW 170104) seems to Fill the gap between the two former merger black holes, which  raise the question what BH mass upper- and lower boundaries and BH  ratios we could expect?
 Could it even explain the Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) conundrum about the narrow energy focusing of the explosion energy by assuming that we have to do with a splitting BH in two equal halves by a much smaller one crashing into it?
Several nebula ( like the Eagle -Spire) seem to show such splitting processes.

Consequently, it would be interesting to investigate the directional focusing  of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) could be originated  by the merging and even splitting of smaller lower bound BHs as suggested to take place in nebula like the Eagle (Spire) nebula.

 I would propose that there could be three different merger and splitting systems of BHs depending on the size and ratios of both BHs.
1: Normal merger BHs as found by LIGO. Which seem so have rations between: 1/1.24 and 1/1.9 with masses of the participating BHs and resulting BHs between: 6 and 60 solar masses.
2: BH splitting into two equal halves, observed in the Eagle ( spire) nebula with unknown ratios

3: Central Galaxy BHs gobbling up  much smaller BHs and growing in size with small steps.