NEWS

14th DBHC condortium meeting at the historic site of Sonnenborgh

April 17, 2026 we have our 14th DBHC meeting - this time at the historic astronomical observatory site of Sonnenborgh in Utrecht. Get an update on the Einstein Telescope (ET)  progress, progress in the Event Horzion Telescope (EHT) project in Namibia and learn more about new insights from (string) theory regarding black holes... Hope to see you there! Register via the link below. 

DBHC at the National Physics Teacher Conference (WND 2025) & KNA teacher day

On December 12th & 13th, physics teachers from across the Netherlands will have the chance to learn about different societal engagement projects that we also developed within our DBHC consortium, such as our Black Hole Finder app. Additionally, we were present at the KNA teacher day in Nijmegen with our educational programme. Read more about it via the link below! 

Our film SpaceTime wins another award at the International Filmfestival The Hague!

The movie that we made to inform the public about our research at black holes via gravitational waves (and the Einstein Telescope) is now touring the world: from Taiwan to India, China and Hawaii. But also closer to home it became noticed, at the International filmfestival in The Hague. Read more about our film (and watch it yourself!) via the link below

Visiting our partner KNMI with the whole consortium: how updated geo and weather information determines proper telescope functioning! 

As a consortium we study black holes with various telescopes, such as the EHT that made an 'image' of a black hole - or the ET that 'listens' to colliding black holes trough graviational waves. To predict clear skies and find stable noise-free grounds for our telescopes we need our consortium partner KNAW. 

Consortium member Michiel van der Meulen receives high European award for earth scientists

Michiel is known as a bridge-builder between science and society: he makes complex geological topics accessible to a wide audience – from government ministers to schoolchildren. In our DBHC project he plays a pivotal role in defining the right location for the new Einstein Telescope.

Mysterious objects in the early universe may be black hole stars? Our consortium member Peter Jonker explains it in the NOS news

Not everything in the universe is what it seems. Some things, like tiny red objects captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), might look like stars or galaxies. But new research suggests they could be something else entirely – something we’ve never seen before...

Hawkings theory about ever growing black holes now finally experimentally confirmed! 

Thanks to highly precise observations made with LIGO, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory, Hawking's theory has now been verified for the first time. Read more about this deep insight from theory combined with new experimental findings via one of our consortium members Chris van den Broeck, below.

Our consortium member Peter Jonker made a new discovery about fast X-ray transients and black holes...

A new kind of stellar explosion provides a novel way to probe the distant Universe, according to new results published by Peter Jonker and Andrew Levan in Nature Astronomy. The team used the new Einstein Prob (see image above) for a precise position measurement, together with data from other telescopes.

On 14 July 2025, the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration announced the discovery of GW231123

GW231123 is the most massive black hole merger ever observed with gravitational waves: together the two merged holes created a new black hole with a mass more than 225 times the mass of our sun... 
Read more about it via the button below!

Workshop at the HvA: developing educational material for school children & teachers

Our 12th DBHC consortium meeting was at the Hogeschool van Amsterdam (HvA): here they develop new educational tools to teach science at schools. Read more about their project via the button below. It was an interesting experience for our scientists to be involved in education reserach and to think about new ways to explain black hole physics! 

Many awards for our SpaceTime movie about gravitational waves!

Our movie SpaceTime, created together with animation studio BigPixel, is awarded several prizes at filmfestivals. We are of course most enthousiastic about informing such a wide public about exciting gravitational wave research and the upcoming Einstein Telescope! Have a look at the list of awards below.

Our DBHC consortium member Gerard ‘t Hooft receives Breakthrough Prize

Winning this ‘Oscars of the sciences’ is truly a great honour  and comes with 3M euro. It is only awarded for scientists that made a major impact on scientific understanding worldwide. We are very proud of our DBHC member! Read more about the prize and 't Hoofts work on black holes below.

Visit to the ET Pathfinder at our 11th consortium meeting

February 6 we were again welcomed at the ET Pathfinder in Maastricht, where a smaller version of the ET telescope is in its finishing phase. Here all sorts of techniques that could be implemented in the ET can be tested. Read more about the project on the ET Pathfinder website below.

Online meet & greet with our Black Hole Finder App team! 

On December 18, between 17:00-18:00 CET our team that developed the Black Hole Finder App will be available in an online Zoom meeting to answer all of your questions about the app and the science behind it. Find the zoom link in their website below to take part!

Dark energy and expansion of the universe linked to black holes

A new publication in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics shows a link between the growing amount of black holes in the universe, and the expansion of our universe via black energy. A very exciting discovery that will be discussed heavily the coming years!

First “black hole triple” discovered!

MIT and Caltech scientists have discovered two stars near a black hole. One of them is at a huge distance, which means that the black hole is affecting even distant objects and was probably created by a 'soft stellar death', which is quite peculiar!

Our cofund partner Innoseis is aiming to make its mark on the Lunar surface

After using their sensors on the surface of our earth, Innoseis Sensor Technologies’ engineers have now successfully delivered the first seismic sensor prototypes that will be used in a lunar seismic mission that will land on the Moon in 2026! 

Sera Markoff installed as new KNAW member

Our consortium member Sera Markoff has been elected as a new member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Read more about it via the KNAW page below.

Black Hole Finder App update!

Thanks to the great success of our black hole finder app it is now also accessible in Spanish, German, Chinese, Bengali, Polish, and Italian -  thereby greatly increasing the number of people who can access the citizen science app in their native language. Go search for black holes with us!

Our PhD Jildou Hollander about doing outreach

Explaining your work to the public is an important and sometimes underrated job amongst scientist. However, we think inspiring new generations and justifying the use of public money is of increased importance!

Teylers medal for PD Emilie Skulberg

Our postdoc Emilie Skulberg has been awarded the Teylers medal for her historical research into visual traditions in astronomy, especially in the work of the Event Horizon Telescope: how to visualise a black hole from raw data? ("seeing = believing"?)

Film "Spacetime" on screen!

Together with the opening of the Einstein Telescope Education Center (ETEC) we had a first viewing of our 3D inverted dome film "Spacetime". It will be on screen for another three years (!) in Discovery museum Kerkrade. More info below!

NWA impact workshop

We had a wonderful NWA workshop day in Leiden, to check if our project is on track and measure our societal impact trough our outreach and education programmes. Very interesting also to learn from other (biology) consortia how they approach their impact pathways.

Our magazine is out! 

Together with New Scientist, Museum Boerhaave, Discovery Museum, Nikhef and the Einstein Telescope team we now have a magazine about our research at black holes and (their) gravitational waves. Meet our team members via various interviews - PDF link below!

Most massive stellar black hole in our galaxy found

Astronomers spotted the most massive stellar black hole ever seen in our Milky Way, 33 sun masses, via data from our European Space Agency’s Gaia mission. Read more below.

Our DBHC member Elena Maria Rossi wins Vici prize

Elena Maria Rossi receives a funding of 1.5M euro for her research, looking at the origins of supermassive black holes. Read more about her research below.

Opening of our museum exhibition 'Closer to the Black Hole'! 

From March 21 our exhibition Closer to the Black Hole will be open for public (until January 2025). Read more about it and book tickets via the button below.

9th DBHC meeting @ museum Boerhaave, Leiden

Join our DBHC meeting in museum Boerhave, Leiden, April 5. View the timetable and register via the button below!

New photo from M87

The black hole at the center of galaxy M87 has been imaged with a higher resolution than before, thanks to an additional telescope in Greenland that extends the global EHT network  

Group picture!

We made a picture at our 8th DBHC consortium-wide meeting in Nijmegen; not the whole team could be present,  but at least a large part of our group. Watch a larger version of the image via the link below.

Black Hole Finder App at NPO

Stefan Vandoren gives an interview on the Dutch NPO Radio 1 show about our new black hole finder app. Watch and listen to the interview via the link below!

Search for black holes together with us!

Peter Jonker and his team launched the 'Black Hole Finder app', to search for new black holes together with the public. Read more about it and download the application via the link below.

Something that happens around black holes might be more fundamental...

Our consortium member Heino Falcke, together with Michael Wondrak and Walter van Suijlekom, gives a new perspective on Hawking radiation...

Athena Award for Monika 

Our consortium member Monika Mościbrodzka (Radboud University) won another prize! This time the Athena Award for female researchers that stand out, being great role models for others

2.5 million for fast X-ray flashes

Our consortium member (and co-PI) Peter Jonker receives a major European research grant of 2.5 million euro for his research at fast X-ray flashes.

Measuring gravitational waves in space

A group of Dutch researchers working on space detector LISA have received twelve million euros. Among them is our consortium member Gijs Nelemans, astronomer at the SRON and RU. He talks about it on the radio, listen to it via the button below.

In depth articles

We now published a selection of populair science articles about recent discoveries in the field of black holes. Please read more about it via the button below. Enjoy!

Two prizes!

The British Royal Astronomical Society (RAS) has individually honored our DBHC members Monika Mościbrodzka and Heino Falcke (both Radboud University) for their research into black holes.

New black hole found closest to Earth

A new black holes has been detected that is just 1500 light years away from earth... 

Stefan about "The attraction of black holes"...

Read a recent NWO interview with project leader Stefan Vandoren below, and learn more about what we do and why we do it!

First picture of our 'own' black hole!

EHT made a 1st ever picture of the black hole located in the center our Milky Way...

ET gets 42 million euro's from NGF

The realization of the Einstein Telescope gets one step closer with this large contribution from the Dutch government...

Kickoff!

Watch our kickoff video of the consortium in Kerkrade on 13 September 2021 below...