Black-Holes

Astronomers Stunned as Supermassive Black Hole in NGC 1277 Suddenly Requires Building Permit Before Consuming Neighboring Stars

CAMBRIDGE — Dr. Elena Vasquez, a senior research scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, is currently staring at a spreadsheet that contains nothing so much as a 28-page permit application from the city of Coma Berenices.

“We don’t know what happened,” Vasquez told reporters at a hastily-convened press conference. “Yesterday, our black hole in the Perseus cluster was just sitting there, quietly accreting matter at its normal rate of approximately one solar mass per year. Then, during the Tuesday night window, something changed. The event horizon began emitting a notification: ‘PERMIT REQUEST SENT FOR GROWTH ABOVE 1.24 x 10^9 SOLAR MASSES.’”