This new study indicates that VLA J2130+12 is a black hole with a mass a few times bigger than our Sun. The black hole apparently didn't get spotted because it wasn't acting quite like the space phenomenon should when it's found in a binary system. "Usually, we find black holes when they are pulling in lots of material. Before falling into the black hole this material gets very hot and emits brightly in X-rays," said Bailey Tetarenko of the University of Alberta, Canada. "This one is so quiet that it's practically a stealth black hole."

According to NASA, estimates suggest that tens of thousands to millions of these black holes could exist within our Galaxy -- which is three to thousands of times as many as previously thought. "Unless we were incredibly lucky to find one source like this in a small patch of the sky, there must be many more of these black hole binaries in our Galaxy than we used to think," said co-author Arash Bahramian, also of the University of Alberta.

"Stealth black hole" sounds really, really cool. Now let's get a photo of one, please.