Extreme Black Hole Larry

Extreme Black Hole Larry is the strongest cyclone ever known to exist in the universe. It is an extreme black hole that is currently active in a distant galaxy. Larry is currently packing winds of Googolplex^Googolplex^Googolplex Light Years per Nanosecond (LYPNS). Its pressure, on the contrary, is -Googolplex^Googolplex^Googolplex terabars. Larry is much stronger than Mini Black Hole Quinn and Theoretical Black Hole, as it is the only black hole formed from a tropical cyclone to ever reach "Extreme Black Hole" status.

Meteorological History
On December 24, a tropical wave formed on the planet of Kepler 3606Z (far away, not discovered yet). Due to no wind shear and waters of 1 billion degrees Celsius, the wave explosively deepened to a hurricane in nanoseconds, and eventually became an Ultra Mini Black Hole. At this point, it was named Larry, and absorbed the entire planet of Kepler 3606Z. Absorbing the planet caused Larry to expand into a Theoretical Black Hole, due to the high amount of energy created from the explosion. On Christmas Day in Earth, Larry's intensification continued, becoming the first ever known Extreme Black Hole.

Larry is currently threatening to absorb nearby Theoretical Black Hole Richard, which was believed to be very strong but does not have exact measurements on wind speed. The forecast trajectory of Larry has it absorbing the Milky Way Galaxy by the year 2017.