Santa Fe New Mexican

Glimpse of black hole

‘Science fiction has become science fact’ with groundbrea­king image that captivates scientists

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — Humanity got its first glimpse Wednesday of the cosmic place of no return: a black hole. And it’s as hot, as violent and as beautiful as science fiction imagined.

In a breakthrou­gh that thrilled the world of astrophysi­cs and stirred talk of a Nobel Prize, scientists released the first image ever made of a black hole, revealing a fiery doughnut-shaped object in a galaxy 53 million lightyears from Earth.

“Science fiction has become science fact,” University of Waterloo theoretica­l physicist Avery Broderick, one of the leaders of the research team of about 200 scientists from 20 countries, declared as the colorized orangeand-black picture was unveiled.

The image, assembled from data gathered by eight radio telescopes around the world, shows light and gas swirling around the lip of a supermassi­ve black hole, a monster of the universe whose existence was theorized by Einstein more than a century ago but confirmed only indirectly over the decades.

Supermassi­ve black holes are situated at the center of most galaxies, including ours, and are so dense that nothing, not even light, can escape their gravitatio­nal pull. Light gets bent and twisted around by gravity in a bizarre funhouse effect as it gets sucked into the abyss along with superheate­d gas and dust.

The new image confirmed yet another piece of Einstein’s general theory of relativity. Einstein even predicted the object’s neatly symmetrica­l shape. “We have seen what we thought was unseeable. We have seen and taken a picture of a black hole,” announced Sheperd Doeleman of Harvard, leader of the project.

Jessica Dempsey, another codiscover­er and deputy director of the East Asian Observator­y in Hawaii, said the fiery circle reminded her of the flaming Eye of Sauron from the Lord of the Rings trilogy.

Three years ago, scientists using an extraordin­arily sensitive observing system heard the sound of two much smaller black holes merging to create a gravitatio­nal wave, as Einstein predicted. The new image, published in the Astrophysi­cal Journal Letters and announced around the world, adds light to that sound.

Outside scientists suggested the achievemen­t could be worthy of a Nobel, just like the gravitatio­nal wave discovery.

“I think it looks very convincing,” said Andrea Ghez, director of the UCLA Galactic Center Group, who wasn’t part of the discovery team.

The picture was made with equipment that detects wavelength­s invisible to the human eye, so astronomer­s added color to convey the ferocious heat of the gas and dust, glowing at a temperatur­e of perhaps millions of degrees. But if a person were to somehow get close to this black hole, it might not look quite like that, astronomer­s said.

The black hole is about 6 billion times the mass of our sun and is in a galaxy called M87. Its “event horizon” — the precipice, or point of no return where light and matter get sucked inexorably into the hole — is as big as our entire solar system.

Black holes are the “most extreme environmen­t in the known universe,” Broderick said, a violent, churning place of “gravity run amok.” Unlike smaller black holes, which come from collapsed stars, supermassi­ve black holes are mysterious in origin.

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 ?? EVENT HORIZON TELESCOPE COLLABORAT­ION/MAUNAKEA OBSERVATOR­IES VIA AP ?? Scientists revealed the first image ever made of a black hole after assembling data gathered by a network of radio telescopes.
EVENT HORIZON TELESCOPE COLLABORAT­ION/MAUNAKEA OBSERVATOR­IES VIA AP Scientists revealed the first image ever made of a black hole after assembling data gathered by a network of radio telescopes.

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