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Black Hole Picture Captured For First Time in Space 'Breakthrough' (theguardian.com)

Astronomers have captured the first image of a black hole, heralding a revolution in our understanding of the universe's most enigmatic objects. From a report: The picture shows a halo of dust and gas, tracing the outline of a colossal black hole, at the heart of the Messier 87 galaxy, 55 million light years from Earth. The black hole itself -- a cosmic trapdoor from which neither light nor matter can escape -- is unseeable. But the latest observations take astronomers right to its threshold for the first time, illuminating the event horizon beyond which all known physical laws collapse.

The breakthrough image was captured by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), a network of eight radio telescopes spanning locations from Antarctica to Spain and Chile, in an effort involving more than 200 scientists. Sheperd Doeleman, Event Horizon Telescope Director and Harvard University senior research fellow said: "Black holes are the most mysterious objects in the universe. We have seen what we thought was unseeable. We have taken a picture of a black hole." The image gives the first direct glimpse of a black hole's accretion disk, a fuzzy doughnut-shaped ring of gas and dust that steadily "feeds" the monster within.
A video stream of the press conference.

4 of 322 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Article or it didn't happen? by dtolman · · Score: 5, Informative

    Why link to The Guardian when you can view the formal paper in all its glory - including multiple images taken over the course of a week: https://iopscience.iop.org/jou...

  2. Re:Article or it didn't happen? by olsmeister · · Score: 5, Funny

    You need to learn to live with strange happenings when you're dealing with black holes.

  3. Re:Pic was not "captured" but computer generated by Drethon · · Score: 5, Informative

    it was not "captured" but computer generated. this is no photo. radio telescopes don't take pictures, they record waves. Am I wrong?

    True, and optical telescopes (mk 1 eyeball being the lowest technology example) just record em waves too. Most of the best cameras these days use computer chips to generate the image. So it seems like any other camera to me, just with a bit of a different lens and processing system.

  4. Re:How to interpret the image by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The black hole from Interstellar is actually NOT a "concept drawing", it was rendered by a relativistic ray tracing software. There is even a refereed paper in a scientific journal about the code (https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0264-9381/32/6/065001). Only the relativistic color and brightness shift of the disc were left out because they were deemed too confusing for the movie audience.