Erika @ExploreCosmos_
There is a long-standing assumption in astrophysics that when massive stars reach the end of their lives, they collapse and leave behind compact remnants, either neutron stars or black holes. That picture works well for a broad range of stellar masses, but theory has always suggested that the very most massive stars follow a different, more extreme path. Instead of collapsing, they may be completely disrupted in an event known as a pair-instability supernova, leaving no remnant at all.
The underlying physics is subtle but robust. In extremely massive stellar cores, temperatures become so high that gamma-ray photons can spontaneously convert into electron–positron pairs. This process reduces the radiation pressure that normally supports the star against gravity. With that pressure suddenly weakened, the core begins to collapse. But instead of continuing into a black hole, the collapse triggers an explosive thermonuclear runaway, primarily oxygen burning, that reverses the collapse and unbinds the entire star. The result is not a remnant, but total destruction: all of the stellar material is ejected into space.
However, this outcome is not a single, clean threshold. For a range of slightly lower core masses, stars can enter a regime known as pulsational pair-instability. In these cases, the same pair-production mechanism destabilizes the core, but not enough to completely unbind the star in one event. Instead, the star undergoes a series of violent pulses, ejecting substantial amounts of mass over time. After shedding enough material, the core eventually stabilizes and collapses, forming a black hole. This process is important because it naturally produces black holes that sit just below the expected mass gap, effectively sculpting its lower boundary.
For decades, the full pair-instability mechanism remained largely theoretical. While some candidate explosions have been proposed observationally, direct and unambiguous evidence has been difficult to establish. What has changed in recent years is not just our ability to observe light from distant explosions, but our ability to “listen” to the universe through gravitational waves. Since the first detections by @LIGO and @ego_virgo , we now have a growing catalog of merging black holes, each event providing precise measurements of their masses.
When researchers began to treat this catalog statistically, as a kind of mass distribution or “map” of black holes, they noticed something striking. There appears to be a deficit, or even a gap, in the population of black holes above roughly 45–50 solar masses and extending up to around 120 solar masses. This is not a trivial observational bias; the detectors are actually more sensitive to higher-mass mergers, so if anything, such objects should be easier to find.
This absence aligns remarkably well with the theoretical predictions of pair-instability supernovae. Stars that would have produced black holes in that mass range instead undergo total disruption, preventing the formation of remnants in precisely that interval. On the other side of the gap, theory predicts that if the helium core exceeds roughly 135 solar masses, the collapse proceeds so rapidly that explosive burning cannot reverse it, and the star collapses directly into a black hole. This creates a second population of more massive black holes beyond the gap, completing the overall structure expected from stellar evolution models.
What makes this result particularly compelling is that it is indirect. We are not observing the pair-instability explosions themselves in these data; instead, we are inferring their existence from what is missing. The lack of black holes in a specific mass range becomes a measurable signature of a physical process that leaves no object behind. In that sense, the evidence is statistical but physically grounded, emerging from the cumulative behavior of many independent events.
There are still open questions. Some black holes detected in mergers appear to fall within or near this expected gap, suggesting more complex formation channels, such as hierarchical mergers where smaller black holes merge repeatedly inside dense stellar environments. These processes can populate the gap and complicate the interpretation, but they do not erase the overall structure seen in the mass distribution. Instead, they add another layer of astrophysical nuance.
What this line of research demonstrates is that stellar evolution does not end with the disappearance of a star, it leaves imprints that can be read long after the event itself. Gravitational waves, in particular, provide a fundamentally different observational window, one that is sensitive not to light but to mass and dynamics. By assembling these observations into a coherent statistical framework, we are effectively reconstructing the life cycles of the most massive stars in the universe.
In practical terms, this is one of the clearest examples of how absence can function as evidence in astrophysics. The missing black holes are not a gap in our data; they are the data. And within that gap lies confirmation of a prediction made decades ago, now supported by an entirely new kind of observation. Even when a star leaves nothing behind, it still leaves a measurable imprint on the universe.
Here's a new study 👉 nature.com/articles/s4158…