Astronomers share first image of the black hole at the center of the Milky Way

Shawn Knight

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What just happened? On Thursday, astronomers unveiled an image of a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy that is four million times larger than our Sun. The image shared today was created by a global research team using observations from a worldwide network of radio telescopes. While we can't see the black hole itself because it is completely dark, astronomers were able to capture a telltale signature of it: a dark center surrounded by a bright, ring-like structure.

The immense gravitational pull of the black hole bends the light around the edges, creating the donut-like shape visible in the image.

"We were stunned by how well the size of the ring agreed with predictions from Einstein's Theory of General Relativity," said EHT Project Scientist Geoffrey Bower from the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Academia Sinica, Taipei. "These unprecedented observations have greatly improved our understanding of what happens at the very center of our galaxy and offer new insights on how these giant black holes interact with their surroundings."

This isn't the first time a black hole has been photographed. That honor goes to an image published by astronomers in 2019 highlighting a black hole at the center of the Messier 87 galaxy roughly 55 million light years away. Today's release does represent our first look at Sagittarius A*, however.

The two black holes look visually similar despite the fact that Sagittarius A* is more than a thousand times smaller than M87*.

Researchers are excited to now have images of two black holes of extremely different sizes. With them, they'll be able to further research how gravity behaves in these unique environments.

The team's results have been published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters for those interested in digging deeper.

Image credit Event Horizon Telescope collaboration

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This is a communist black hole. A proper American black hole wouldn't be a thousand times smaller than anything else.
 
This is a communist black hole. A proper American black hole wouldn't be a thousand times smaller than anything else.
We'll probably have to wait until JWST photographs it before we see communists being sucked into it, though. :laughing:
 
"that is four million times larger than our Sun"

Geezzeee ...... so the earth really is smaller than a fart in the universe ......
 
I know this is a nitpick, but it's *not* an image of a black hole. It's an image of *everything else*. You can't see a black hole, no light gets out. To see it or photograph it you need reflected light, and you can't get it, because all the light gets sucked in, that's what a black hole *is*. The photo is a photo of the *effect* a black hole has on its surroundings outside the event horizon.
 
I know this is a nitpick, but it's *not* an image of a black hole. It's an image of *everything else*. You can't see a black hole, no light gets out. To see it or photograph it you need reflected light, and you can't get it, because all the light gets sucked in, that's what a black hole *is*. The photo is a photo of the *effect* a black hole has on its surroundings outside the event horizon.

The blurb does state this exactly.
 
"We promise that this is a really cool picture of super-science-y stuff and not a blurry close-up of someone's light-up wristband."

Maybe I shouldn't have been expecting the accretion disk and light bending to look as cool as it did in Interstellar.
 
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