Black hole hunters cast gaze at center of the Milky Way galaxy
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[May 10, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Residing at the
center of our spiral-shaped Milky Way galaxy is a beast - a supermassive
black hole possessing 4 million times the mass of our sun and consuming
any material including gas, dust and stars straying within its immense
gravitational pull.
Scientists have been using the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), a global
network of observatories working collectively to observe radio sources
associated with black holes, to study this Milky Way denizen and have
set an announcement for Thursday that signals they may finally have
secured an image of it. The black hole is called Sagittarius A*, or SgrA*.
The researchers involved in this international collaboration have
declined to disclose the nature of their announcement ahead of scheduled
news conferences but issued a news release calling it a "groundbreaking
result on the center of our galaxy."
In 2019, the EHT team unveiled the first-ever photo of a black hole. The
image - a glowing ring of red, yellow and white surrounding a dark
center - showed the supermassive black hole at the center of another
galaxy called Messier 87, or M87.
The researchers also have focused their work on Sagittarius A*, located
about 26,000 light-years - the distance light travels in a year, 5.9
trillion miles (9.5 trillion km) - from Earth.
"One of the objects that we hope to observe with the Event Horizon
Telescope... is our own black hole in our own backyard,"
Harvard–Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics astrophysicist Sheperd
Doeleman, the former EHT project director, said during a July 2021
scientific presentation.
Black holes are extraordinarily dense objects with gravity so powerful
that not even light can escape.
There are different categories of black holes. The smallest are
so-called stellar-mass black holes formed by the collapse of massive
individual stars at the ends of their life cycles. There also are
intermediate-mass black holes, a step up in mass. And finally there are
the supermassive black holes that inhabit the center of most galaxies.
These are thought to arise relatively soon after their galaxies are
formed, devouring enormous amounts of material to achieve colossal size.
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Astrophysicist Shepherd Doeleman shows the first image of a black
hole during the press conference in Washington, U.S., April 10,
2019. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo
The EHT project was begun in 2012 to try to directly
observe the immediate environment of a black hole. A black hole's
event horizon is the point of no return beyond which anything -
stars, planets, gas, dust and all forms of electromagnetic radiation
- gets dragged into oblivion.
The fact that black holes do not permit light to
escape makes viewing them quite challenging. The project scientists
have looked for a ring of light - super-heated disrupted matter and
radiation circling at tremendous speed at the edge of the event
horizon - around a region of darkness representing the actual black
hole. This is known as the black hole's shadow or silhouette.
Known as a spiral galaxy, the Milky Way viewed from above or below
resembles a spinning pinwheel, with our sun situated on one of the
spiral arms and Sagittarius A* located at the center. The galaxy
contains at least 100 billion stars.
The M87 black hole is far more distant and massive than Sagittarius
A*, situated about 54 million light-years from Earth with a mass 6.5
billion times that of our sun. In disclosing the photo of that black
hole, the researchers said that their work showed that Albert
Einstein, the famed theoretical physicist, had correctly predicted
that the shape of the shadow would be almost a perfect circle.
Thursday's announcement will be made in simultaneous news
conferences in the United States, Germany, China, Mexico, Chile,
Japan and Taiwan. Netherlands-based radio astronomer Huib Jan van
Langevelde is the current EHT project director.
Doeleman emphasized the size scale of supermassive black holes.
"There are big things out there and we are small," Doeleman said.
"But that's also kind of uplifting in a certain way, too. We've got
a lot to explore in the universe."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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