Sky & Telescope - USA (2019-09)

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EVENT HORIZON TELESCOPE by Camille M. Carlisle


18 SEPTEMBER 2019 • SKY & TELESCOPE


The Face


A worldwide team of scientists has detected the shadow created
by an event horizon. Here’s how they did it.

pMEET M87* The gravity of the supermassive black hole in the
elliptical galaxy M87 creates a dark shadow feature surrounded by a
ring of light. The image is purposely blurred to show only the structure
S the team is confi dent of.

cientists have unmasked mystery incarnate. On April
10th, representatives of the Event Horizon Telescope
collaboration unveiled a reconstructed image of the
gargantuan black hole that squats in the heart of the giant
elliptical galaxy M87. The black hole is an invisible behe-
moth, so large that light would take 1½ days to cross it.
And it’s beautiful.
“We have seen what we thought was unseeable,” said
EHT director Sheperd Doeleman (Center for Astrophysics,
Harvard & Smithsonian) during a National Science Founda-
tion press conference in Washington, D.C. “We have seen
and taken a picture of a black hole. Here it is.”
An outcome of Einstein’s equations of gravity, black holes
have suffered a century of disbelief, debate, and then won-
der as scientists grappled with their existence. It was astro-
nomical observations of blazing beacons in distant galaxies,
as well as of invisible partners to stars closer to home, that
ultimately turned the tide in black holes’ favor in the late
20th century. They are now thought to exist at a wide range

of masses, from the corpses of individual stars to colossi
that serve as key players in galaxies’ evolution. We’ve even
detected ripples in spacetime created by objects that behave
just as colliding black holes should (S&T: Sept. 2017, p. 24).
But until the EHT, no one had ever seen one. “Science fi c-
tion has become science fact,” says theorist Avery Broderick
(Perimeter Institute and University of Waterloo, Canada).

The Shadow Knows
Technically speaking, the EHT’s radio images don’t show
the black hole but rather the silhouette of its defi ning char-
acteristic — the event horizon, the point of no return. As
gas swirls around a black hole and dives deeper into the pit
the black hole creates in spacetime, it heats up, emitting
light across the electromagnetic spectrum, from X-rays to

Black Hole

of a

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