10
April, 2019
Astronomers
on Wednesday unveiled the first photo of a black hole, one of the
star-devouring monsters scattered throughout the Universe and
obscured by impenetrable shields of gravity.
The
image of a dark core encircled by a flame-orange halo of white-hot
plasma looks like any number of artists' renderings over the last 30
years.
But
this time, it's the real deal.
"The
history of science will be divided into the time before the image,
and the time after the image," said Michael Kramer, director at
the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy.
Carlos
Moedas, European Commissioner for Research, Science and Innovation
called the feat a "huge breakthrough for humanity."
The
supermassive black hole immortalised by a far-flung network of radio
telescopes is 50 million lightyears away at the centre of a galaxy
known as M87.
"It's
a distance that we could have barely imagined," Frederic Gueth,
an astronomer at France's National Centre for Scientific Research
(CNRS) and co-author of studies detailing the findings, told AFP.
Most speculation had centred on the other candidate targeted by the Event Horizon Telescope: Sagittarius A*, a closer but smaller black hole at the centre of our own galaxy, the Milky Way.
Locking
down an image of M87's supermassive black hole at such distance is
comparable to photographing a pebble on the Moon, the scientists
said.
It
was also very much a team effort.
"Instead
of constructing a giant telescope that would collapse under its own
weight, we combined many observatories," Michael Bremer, an
astronomer at the Institute for Millimetric Radio Astronomy (IRAM) in
Grenoble, told AFP.
Earth
in a thimble
Over
several days in April 2017, eight radio telescopes in Hawaii,
Arizona, Spain, Mexico, Chile, and the South Pole zeroed in on Sag A*
and M87.
Knitted
together, they formed a virtual observatory some 12,000 kilometres
across—roughly the diameter of Earth.
"The
data is like an incomplete puzzle set," said team member Monika
Moscibrodzka, an astronomer at Radboud University. "We only see
pieces of the real true image, and then we have to fill in the gaps
of the missing pieces."
In
the end, M87 was more photogenic. Like a fidgety child, Sag A* was
too "active" to capture a clear picture, the scientists
said.
"What
we see in the image is the shadow of the black hole's rim—known as
the event horizon, or the point of no return—set against the
luminous accretion disk," Gueth told AFP.
The
unprecedented image—so often imagined in science and science
fiction —- has been analysed in six studies co-authored by 200
experts from 60-odd institutions and published Wednesday in
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
"I
never thought that I would see a real one in my lifetime," said
CNRS astrophysicist Jean-Pierre Luminet, author in 1979 of the first
digital simulation of a black hole.
Coined
in the mid-60s by US physicist John Archibald Wheeler, the term
"black hole" refers to a point in space where matter is so
compressed as to create a gravity field from which even light cannot
escape.
The
more mass, the bigger the hole. At the same scale of compression,
Earth would fit inside a thimble.
A
successful outcome depended in part on the vagaries of weather during
the April 2017 observation period.
"For
everything to work, we needed to have clear visibility at every
(telescope) location worldwide", said IRAM scientist Pablo
Torne, recalling collective tension, fatigue and, finally, relief.
'Hell
of a Christmas present'
Torne
was at the controls of the Pico Veleta telescope in Spain's Sierra
Madre mountains.
After
that, is was eight months of nail-biting while scientists at MIT
Haystack Observatory in Massachusetts and the Max Planck Institute
for Radio Astronomy in Bonn crunched the data.
The
Event Horizon Telescope—a network of eight radio telescopes across
the globe—gathered data to generate the first image of a black hole
some 50 million lightyears from Earth
The
Universe is filled with electromagnetic "noise", and there
was no guarantee M87's faint signals could be extracted from a
mountain of data so voluminous it could not be delivered via the
Internet.
There
was at least one glitch.
"We
were desperately waiting for the data from the South Pole Telescope,
which—due to extreme weather conditions during the southern
hemisphere winter—didn't arrive until six months later,"
recalled Helger Rottmann from the Max Planck Institute.
It
arrived, to be precise, on December 23, 2017.
"When,
a few hours later, we saw that everything was there, it was one hell
of a Christmas present," Rottmann said.
It
would take another year, however, to piece together the data into an
image.
Coined
in the mid-60s by American physicist John Archibald Wheeler, the term
"black hole" refers to a point in space where matter is so
compressed as to create a gravity field from which even light cannot
escape
"To
be absolutely sure, we did the work four times with four different
teams," said Gueth.
Team
scientists presenting the findings at a news conference in Brussels
were visibly moved.
"We
are looking at a region we have never looked at before, that we
cannot really imagine being there," said Heino Falcke, chair of
the EHT Science Council.
"It
feels like looking at the gates of hell, at the end of space and
time—the event horizon, the point of no return."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.