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Thompson et al. (Reports, 1 November 2019, p. 637, Science) interpreted the unseen companion of the red giant star 2MASS J05215658+4359220 as most likely a black hole. We argue that if the red giant is about one solar mass, its companion can be a close binary consisting of two main-sequence stars. This would explain why no X-ray emission is detected from the system.
van den Heuvel & Tauris argue that if the red giant star in the system 2MASS J05215658+4359220 has a mass of 1 solar mass (M$_odot$), then its unseen companion could be a binary composed of two 0.9 M$_odot$ stars, making a triple system. We contend t
All stellar mass black holes have hitherto been identified by X-rays emitted by gas that is accreting onto the black hole from a companion star. These systems are all binaries with black holes below 30 M$_{odot}$$^{1-4}$. Theory predicts, however, th
There are very few confirmed black holes with a mass that could be $sim! 4, M_odot$ and no neutron stars with masses greater than $sim! 2, M_odot$, creating a gap in the observed distribution of compact star masses. Some black holes with masses betwe
At about 70 solar masses, the recently-discovered dark object orbited by a B-type star in the system LB-1 is difficult to understand as the end point of standard stellar evolution, except as a binary black hole (BBH). LB-1 shows a strong, broad H-alp
We report the discovery of the closest known black hole candidate as a binary companion to V723 Mon. V723 Mon is a nearby ($dsim460,rm pc$), bright ($Vsimeq8.3$~mag), evolved ($T_{rm eff, giant}simeq4440$~K, and $L_{rm giant}simeq173~L_odot$) red gia