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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBlack Hole Image Makes History; NASA Telescopes Coordinated Observations
A black hole and its shadow have been captured in an image for the first time, a historic feat by an international network of radio telescopes called the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). EHT is an international collaboration whose support in the U.S. includes the National Science Foundation.
Using the Event Horizon Telescope, scientists obtained an image of the black hole at the center of galaxy M87, outlined by emission from hot gas swirling around it under the influence of strong gravity near its event horizon.
Credits: Event Horizon Telescope collaboration et al.
A black hole is an extremely dense object from which no light can escape. Anything that comes within a black holes event horizon, its point of no return, will be consumed, never to re-emerge, because of the black holes unimaginably strong gravity. By its very nature, a black hole cannot be seen, but the hot disk of material that encircles it shines bright. Against a bright backdrop, such as this disk, a black hole appears to cast a shadow.
The stunning new image shows the shadow of the supermassive black hole in the center of Messier 87 (M87), an elliptical galaxy some 55 million light-years from Earth. This black hole is 6.5 billion times the mass of the Sun. Catching its shadow involved eight ground-based radio telescopes around the globe, operating together as if they were one telescope the size of our entire planet.
This is an amazing accomplishment by the EHT team, said Paul Hertz, director of the astrophysics division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Years ago, we thought we would have to build a very large space telescope to image a black hole. By getting radio telescopes around the world to work in concert like one instrument, the EHT team achieved this, decades ahead of time.
To complement the EHT findings, several NASA spacecraft were part of a large effort, coordinated by the EHTs Multiwavelength Working Group, to observe the black hole using different wavelengths of light. As part of this effort, NASAs Chandra X-ray Observatory, Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) and Neil Gehrels SwiftObservatory space telescope missions, all attuned to different varieties of X-ray light, turned their gaze to the M87 black hole around the same time as the Event Horizon Telescope in April 2017. If EHT observed changes in the structure of the black holes environment, data from these missions and other telescopes could be used to help figure out what was going on.
More from NASA: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/news/black-hole-image-makes-history
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Black Hole Image Makes History; NASA Telescopes Coordinated Observations (Original Post)
Princess Turandot
Apr 2019
OP
I had an existential moment yesterday, that feeling when you realize we actually exist, that
DontBooVote
Apr 2019
#3
MineralMan
(146,333 posts)1. Truly amazing that we can observe this!
mopinko
(70,238 posts)2. super cool.
old enough to remember people starting the debate about dark matter, and missing matter.
so cool to live long enough to actually see it.
DontBooVote
(901 posts)3. I had an existential moment yesterday, that feeling when you realize we actually exist, that
reality is real, but how?
And part of that was the realization that we inhabit a ball of rock and gas that is orbiting a star that is orbiting a galaxy that is just one of infinitely countless galaxies in a vast universe that may be just one of many.
When I saw this image, I was blown away. Sure, it's just pixels of light and dark but it is an actual image of a celestial object(?) that I have been fascinated about since I was a child.
Very cool!