Technology

Exotic prime numbers could be hiding inside black holes

2026-03-09 19:58
469 views
Exotic prime numbers could be hiding inside black holes

A new paper makes the strange case for prime numbers at the heart of physics.

  1. Space
  2. Astronomy
  3. Black Holes
Exotic prime numbers could be hiding inside black holes

News By Lyndie Chiou published 9 March 2026

A new paper makes the strange case for prime numbers at the heart of physics.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

An illustration of a black hole churning spacetime around it Could prime numbers be at the heart of black holes? (Image credit: Robert Lea (created with Canva))
  • Copy link
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Email
Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Live Science Get the Live Science Newsletter

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Become a Member in Seconds

Unlock instant access to exclusive member features.

Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You are now subscribed

Your newsletter sign-up was successful

Want to add more newsletters?

Daily Newsletter

Delivered Daily

Daily Newsletter

Sign up for the latest discoveries, groundbreaking research and fascinating breakthroughs that impact you and the wider world direct to your inbox.

Signup + Life's Little Mysteries

Once a week

Life's Little Mysteries

Feed your curiosity with an exclusive mystery every week, solved with science and delivered direct to your inbox before it's seen anywhere else.

Signup + How It Works

Once a week

How It Works

Sign up to our free science & technology newsletter for your weekly fix of fascinating articles, quick quizzes, amazing images, and more

Signup + Space.com Newsletter

Delivered daily

Space.com Newsletter

Breaking space news, the latest updates on rocket launches, skywatching events and more!

Signup + Watch This Space

Once a month

Watch This Space

Sign up to our monthly entertainment newsletter to keep up with all our coverage of the latest sci-fi and space movies, tv shows, games and books.

Signup + Night Sky This Week

Once a week

Night Sky This Week

Discover this week's must-see night sky events, moon phases, and stunning astrophotos. Sign up for our skywatching newsletter and explore the universe with us!

Signup +

Join the club

Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.

Explore An account already exists for this email address, please log in. Subscribe to our newsletter

Like physics, math has its own set of "fundamental particles" — the prime numbers, which can't be broken down into smaller natural numbers. They can only be divided by themselves and 1.

And in a new development, it turns out these mathematical "particles" are offering new ways to tackle some of physics' deepest mysteries. Over the past year, researchers have found that formulas based on the prime numbers can describe features of black holes. Number theorists have spent hundreds of years deriving theorems and conjectures based on the primes. These new connections suggest that the mathematical truths that govern prime numbers may also govern some fundamental laws of the universe. So can physics be expressed in terms of primes?

Black holes are the sites of the universe's most crushing gravitational force. At their centers lie single points called singularities, where classical physics predicts that gravity must be infinite, causing our understanding of space and time to break down. But in the 1960s, physicists found that, immediately surrounding the singularity, a type of chaos emerges — and it looks remarkably similar to a kind of chaos recently found in the primes.

Article continues below You may like
  • An illustration showing a spiral galaxy on the left of the image and a swirl of gas and stars on the right connected by a triangle of red laser light 'Collective hum' of black holes could settle the debate over new physics
  • An illustration of a star collapsing into a black hole Impossibly powerful 'ghost particle' that hit Earth may have come from an exploding black hole
  • A deep space image showing the white gas and stars forming two spiral galaxies next to each other, stretching from the bottom right to top left of the image. The earliest black holes in the universe may still be with us, surprising study claims

Physicists hope to make use of the connection. "I'd say many high-energy physicists don't actually know much about that side of number theory," says Eric Perlmutter of the Institute of Theoretical Physics, Saclay.

Number theory's foundational conjecture on primes is the 1859 Riemann hypothesis. In a hand-written paper, German mathematician Bernhard Riemann provided a formula with two main terms. The first offered a startlingly close estimate for how many prime numbers exist that are smaller than a given number. The second term is the zeta function, whose zeros (the places where the function is equal to zero) tune up the original estimate. The mysterious way in which the zeta zeros always improve the estimate is the subject of the Riemann hypothesis. The hypothesis is so crucial to number theory that anyone who can prove it will earn a $1-million Clay Mathematics Institute prize.

In the late 1980s physicists started to wonder if there was a physical system whose energy levels might be based on the prime numbers. Physicist Bernard Julia of the École Normale Supérieure in France was challenged by a colleague to find a physics analogue described by the zeta function. His solution was to propose a hypothetical kind of particle with energy levels given by the logarithms of prime numbers. Julia called these particles "primons" and a group of them a "primon gas." The partition function — a census of a system’s possible states — of this gas is exactly the Riemann zeta function.

At the time, Julia's concept was a thought experiment — most scientists doubted that primons actually existed. But deep inside black holes, a mathematical link awaited discovery. A little more than two decades later, physicists Yan Fyodorov of King's College London, Ghaith Hiary of Ohio State University and Jon Keating of the University of Oxford saw hints that fractal chaos emerges from the fluctuations of the zeta function's zeros, an idea that was conclusively proven in 2025.

Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter nowContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

Einstein's general theory of relativity shows that the same chaos also arises near a singularity.

Einstein's theory of relativity deals with the chaos around a singularity. (Image credit: Keystone-France/Getty Images)

In a February 2025 preprint, University of Cambridge physicist Sean Hartnoll and graduate student Ming Yang brought Julia's work into the real world. Inside the chaos close to a singularity, they found that a "conformal" symmetry emerges. Hartnoll likens conformal symmetry to Dutch artist M. C. Escher's famous drawings of bats — the same structure repeats on different scales. This scaling symmetry, together with a bit of math, revealed a quantum system near the singularity whose spectrum organizes into prime numbers — a conformal primon gas cloud.

Five months later, they uploaded a preprint with a new twist. The team, which now included University of Cambridge University physicist Marine De Clerck, expanded their analysis to a five-dimensional universe instead of the usual four. They found that the extra dimension forced a new feature: keeping track of the singularity's dynamics now required a "complex" prime number, known as a Gaussian prime, that includes an imaginary component (a number multiplied by the square root of –1). Gaussian primes can't be divided any further by other complex numbers. The authors dubbed this system a "complex primon gas."

What to read next
  • An artist's illustration of a black hole in yellow, blue and pink light Science history: Stephen Hawking writes a tiny paper — and turns our understanding of black holes inside out — March 1, 1974
  • A collage of 32 glowing discs on a black background. Each disc shows concentric rings in vivid colours: purple, orange, and yellow, with bright cyan centres. The discs vary in size and orientation, creating a striking pattern of circular and elliptical shapes. Some objects we thought were planets may actually be tiny black holes from the dawn of time
  • An annotated image of a runaway black hole leaving a streak of new stars in its wake. 'Runaway' black hole detected by the James Webb telescope adds a strange new chapter to our universe's story

While prime numbers can only be divided by themselves and 1, Gaussian prime numbers are even more complex, including an imaginary component. (Image credit: ROBERT BROOK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)

"We don't know yet whether the appearance of prime number randomness close to a singularity has a deeper meaning," Hartnoll says. "However, to my mind, it is very intriguing that the connection extends to higher dimensional theories of gravity," including some candidates for a fully quantum mechanical theory of gravity.

RELATED STORIES

—What is the largest known prime number?

—Mathematicians discover a completely new way to find prime numbers

—Law of 'maximal randomness' explains how broken objects shatter in the most annoying way possible

And in a late 2025 preprint, Perlmutter proposed a new framework involving the zeta zeros. He relaxed the restrictions on the zeta function so it could rely not just on integers but on all real numbers, including irrationals. Doing so opened up even more powerful zeta function techniques to understand quantum gravity. Physicist Jon Keating of the University of Oxford, who was not involved in the new research, says that broader perspectives such as this can reveal new ways to tackle long-standing problems. "It's only when you step back and look at the whole mountain that you think, 'Ah, there's a much better way to get up over there,'" he says.

Perlmutter cautiously hopes the flurry of prime physics will hasten new discoveries, but the approach is one of many fighting for acceptance. "The kinds of things we're trying to understand, black holes in quantum gravity, are surely governed by some beautiful structures," he says. "And number theory seems to be a natural language."

This article was first published at Scientific American. © ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved. Follow on TikTok and Instagram, X and Facebook.

Albert Einstein quiz: What do you know about the life of the famous theoretical physicist?

Lyndie ChiouLyndie ChiouSocial Links NavigationScience writer

Lyndie Chiou is a scientist, a science writer and founder of ZeroDivZero, a science conference website. Her writing has appeared in Scientific American and Sky & Telescope.

View More

You must confirm your public display name before commenting

Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

Logout Read more An illustration showing a spiral galaxy on the left of the image and a swirl of gas and stars on the right connected by a triangle of red laser light 'Collective hum' of black holes could settle the debate over new physics    An illustration of a star collapsing into a black hole Impossibly powerful 'ghost particle' that hit Earth may have come from an exploding black hole    A deep space image showing the white gas and stars forming two spiral galaxies next to each other, stretching from the bottom right to top left of the image. The earliest black holes in the universe may still be with us, surprising study claims    An artist's illustration of a black hole in yellow, blue and pink light Science history: Stephen Hawking writes a tiny paper — and turns our understanding of black holes inside out — March 1, 1974    A collage of 32 glowing discs on a black background. Each disc shows concentric rings in vivid colours: purple, orange, and yellow, with bright cyan centres. The discs vary in size and orientation, creating a striking pattern of circular and elliptical shapes. Some objects we thought were planets may actually be tiny black holes from the dawn of time    An annotated image of a runaway black hole leaving a streak of new stars in its wake. 'Runaway' black hole detected by the James Webb telescope adds a strange new chapter to our universe's story    Latest in Black Holes An artist's illustration of a black hole in yellow, blue and pink light Science history: Stephen Hawking writes a tiny paper — and turns our understanding of black holes inside out — March 1, 1974    Image of disk-galaxy Andromeda taken by Hubble space telescope Scientists may have seen a star collapse directly into a black hole without exploding first    An artist's rendition highlighting the pale, conical swirls that manifest as a corona above the black hole's accretion disk. Scientists spot 'rule-breaking' black hole growing 13 times faster than should be possible    A deep space image showing the white gas and stars forming two spiral galaxies next to each other, stretching from the bottom right to top left of the image. The earliest black holes in the universe may still be with us, surprising study claims    An annotated image of a runaway black hole leaving a streak of new stars in its wake. 'Runaway' black hole detected by the James Webb telescope adds a strange new chapter to our universe's story    An illustration of a star collapsing into a black hole Impossibly powerful 'ghost particle' that hit Earth may have come from an exploding black hole    Latest in News A blond woman wearing blue disposable gloves shows off the front of the ancient coin. 2,000-year-old Phoenician coin was used as bus fare in England, but 'how it got there will always be a mystery'    A firefighter is silhouetted in the glowing orange and yellow blaze of a wildfire as a helicopter above dumps a stream of water below Wildfire season is shifting, but its new time windows vary across Canada and the US drought-prone West    A cartoon image of a brain with waves across the front of it. In people with epilepsy, sleeping after a seizure may trigger more seizures    Three men huddle around a computer monitor in a laboratory space next to a large machine. The man in the middle wearing a navy blue long sleeve holds a phone up to the monitor and scans a QR code. World's smallest QR code can store data for thousands of years ‪—‬ but you need an electron microscope to see it    A smokestack billows thick gray smoke against a smoggy yellowish sky with the buildings below darkened in the haze 'The warming trend nearly doubled after 2014': The rate of global warming has accelerated more in the past decade than ever before    A series of blobs of pink and orange against a black background with a boxout in the top right zooming in on one of the blobs showing a neural network of sorts of purple and orange and pink Enormous 3D map of the universe shows brilliant 'sea of light' near the cosmic dawn    LATEST ARTICLES