In a remarkable new discovery, astronomers studying gravitational waves have found strong evidence that merging black holes are not all the same. Instead, they appear to fall into three distinct groups , each with its own unique characteristics and origin story. This finding is helping scientists better understand how black holes form, evolve, and collide across the universe. The research is based on data collected by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration, one of the world’s most advanced scientific teams dedicated to detecting gravitational waves—ripples in space-time caused by massive cosmic events like black hole mergers. 🌠 A New View from Gravitational Waves Over the past few years, astronomers have detected more than 150 black hole mergers using gravitational-wave observatories. These detections are compiled in a major dataset known as the fourth gravitational-wave catalog (GWTC-4) . When scientists carefully analyzed this data, they noticed something surprising. If all black hole m...