• This forum is specifically for the discussion of factual science and technology. When the topic moves to speculation, then it needs to also move to the parent forum, Science Fiction and Fantasy (SF/F).

    If the topic of a discussion becomes political, even remotely so, then it immediately does no longer belong here. Failure to comply with these simple and reasonable guidelines will result in one of the following.
    1. the thread will be moved to the appropriate forum
    2. the thread will be closed to further posts.
    3. the thread will remain, but the posts that deviate from the topic will be relocated or deleted.
    Thank you for understanding.​

Astronomy: ‘Einstein’s Shadow’ explores what it takes to snap a black hole’s picture

Introversion

Pie aren't squared, pie are round!
Kind Benefactor
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2013
Messages
10,727
Reaction score
15,139
Location
Massachusetts
A new book offers a behind-the-scenes look at the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration

Science News said:
Right now, a ragtag team of astronomers, assembled from institutes across the globe, may be peering in wonder at the first picture of a black hole’s shadow. The quest to create such an image has involved a massive level of scientific coordination, combining data from telescopes at eight observatories scattered from the South Pole to Hawaii to the Atacama Desert in Chile. In Einstein’s Shadow, journalist Seth Fletcher provides a twisting narrative of the project’s inception and how it grew into a worldwide effort.

Called the Event Horizon Telescope, or EHT, the project is “the biggest telescope in the history of humanity,” EHT director Shep Doeleman of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics says in the book. EHT unifies far-flung radio telescopes through a technique called very long baseline interferometry, which involves combining the light waves spotted by each telescope to determine how the light adds up, through a process called interference. Using this technique, EHT can achieve resolution equivalent to picking out a doughnut on the moon. That extreme capability is what’s needed to capture a picture of EHT’s main target: the gigantic black hole at the center of the Milky Way.

EHT captured its first data in 2006, but has yet to produce an image of a black hole. After adding more telescopes and improving the technology, in April 2017, EHT took data aimed at capturing the silhouette of the Milky Way’s central black hole (SN Online: 4/5/17). Those data are still being analyzed.

No one has ever directly seen a black hole, so scientists still debate the details of what black holes are like. A boundary known as an event horizon is thought to exist at the edge of each black hole. This border, beyond which nothing can escape (SN: 5/31/14, p. 16), is what EHT is attempting to image.

...