- #211
Jonathan Scott
Gold Member
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The really interesting point is that according to the usual standard interpretation of General Relativity, no significant electromagnetic radiation is expected from a black hole merger event, but there was an apparent gamma-ray burst detected by the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor within about half a second of the first gravitational wave event. This means one of three things: the gamma-ray burst detection was spurious (unrelated or background noise), the event was not a simple black hole merger but rather a more complex physical event (for example some people have suggested some sort of merger occurring inside a star) or that General Relativity isn't quite right in that extreme situation. If an apparent gamma-ray burst accompanies another detection that would greatly reduce the probability of it being spurious, which would suggest exciting new physics.