Scientists gear up to take a picture of a black hole
January 14, 2012On Wednesday, Jan. 18, astronomers, physicists and scientists from related fields will convene in Tucson, Ariz. from across the world to discuss an endeavor that only a few years ago would have been regarded as nothing less than outrageous. The conference is organized by Dimitrios Psaltis, an associate professor of astrophysics at the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory, and Daniel Marrone, an assistant professor of astronomy at Steward Observatory.
"Nobody has ever taken a picture of a black hole," Psaltis said. "We are going to do just that."
"Even five years ago, such a proposal would not have seemed credible," added Sheperd Doeleman, assistant director of the Haystack Observatory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), who is the principal investigator of the Event Horizon Telescope, as the project is dubbed. "Now we have the technological means to take a stab at it."
First postulated by Albert Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, the existence of black holes has since been supported by decades' worth of observations, measurements and experiments. But never has it been possible to directly observe and image one of these maelstroms whose sheer gravity exerts such cataclysmic power they twist and mangle the very fabric of space and time.
"Black holes are the most extreme environment you can find in the universe," Doeleman said.
The field of gravity around a black hole is so immense that it swallows everything in its reach; not even light can escape its grip. For that reason, black holes are just that emitting no light whatsoever, their "nothingness" blends into the black void of the universe.
So how does one take a picture of something that by definition is impossible to see?
"As dust and gas swirls around the black hole before it is drawn inside, a kind of cosmic traffic jam ensues," Doeleman explained. "Swirling around the black hole like water circling the drain in a bathtub, the matter compresses and the resulting friction turns it into plasma heated to a billion degrees or more, causing it to 'glow' and radiate energy that we can detect here on Earth."
By imaging the glow of matter swirling around the black hole before it goes over the edge of the point of no return and plunges into the abyss of space and time, scientists can only see the outline of the black hole, also called its shadow. Because the laws of physics either don't apply to or cannot describe what happens beyond that point of no return from which not even light can escape, that boundary is called the Event Horizon.
"So far, we have indirect evidence that there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way," Psaltis said. "But once we see its shadow, there will be no doubt."
Even though the black hole suspected to sit at the center of our galaxy is a supermassive one at four million times the mass of the Sun, it is tiny to the eyes of astronomers. Smaller than Mercury's orbit around the Sun, yet almost 26,000 light years away, it appears about the same size as a grapefruit on the moon.
"To see something that small and that far away, you need a very big telescope, and the biggest telescope you can make on Earth is to turn the whole planet into a telescope," Marrone said.
To that end, the team is connecting up to 50 radio telescopes scattered around the globe, including the Submillimeter Telescope (SMT) on Mt. Graham in Arizona, telescopes on Mauna Kea in Hawaii and the Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA) in California. The global array will include several radio telescopes in Europe, a 10-meter dish at the South Pole and potentially a 15-meter antenna atop a 15,000-foot peak in Mexico.
"In essence, we are making a virtual telescope with a mirror that is as big as the Earth," Doeleman said. "Each radio telescope we use can be thought of as a small silvered portion of a large mirror. With enough such silvered spots, one can start to make an image."
"The Event Horizon Telescope is not a first-light project, where we flip a switch and go from no data to a lot of data," he added. "Every year, we increase its capabilities by adding more telescopes, gradually sharpening the image we see of the black hole."
One crucial and eagerly expected key element about to join Event Horizon's global network of radio telescopes is the Atacama Large Millimeter Array, or ALMA, in Chile.
Comprising 50 radio antennas itself, ALMA will function as the equivalent of a dish that is 90 meters in diameter, and become what Doeleman called "a real game changer." "When ALMA comes online, it will double our resolution."
"The EHT will bring us as close to the edge of a black hole as we will ever come," the participating scientists wrote in a project summary.
"We will be able to actually see what happens very close to the horizon of a black hole, which is the strongest gravitational field you can find in the universe," Psaltis said. "No one has ever tested Einstein's Theory of General Relativity at such strong fields."
General Relativity predicts that the bright outline defining the black hole's shadow must be a perfect circle. According to Psaltis, whose research group specializes in Einstein's Theory of General Relativity, this provides an important test.
"If we find the black hole's shadow to be oblate instead of circular, it means Einstein's Theory of General Relativity must be flawed," he said. "But even if we find no deviation from general relativity, all these processes will help us understand the fundamental aspects of the theory much better."
Black holes remain among the least understood phenomena in the universe. Ranging in mass from a few times the mass of the Sun to billions, they appear to coalesce like drops of oil in water. Most if not all galaxies are now believed to harbor a supermassive black hole at their center, and smaller ones are scattered throughout. Our Milky Way is known to be home to about 25 smallish black holes ranging from 5 to 10 times the Sun's mass.
"What is great about the one in the center of the Milky Way is that is big enough and close enough," Marrone said. "There are bigger ones in other galaxies, and there are closer ones, but they're smaller. Ours is just the right combination of size and distance."
The reason astronomers rely on radio waves rather than visible or infrared light to spy on the black hole is two-fold: For one, observing the center of the Milky Way from the Earth requires peering right through the plane of the galaxy. Radio waves are able to penetrate thousands of light-years worth of stars, gas and dust obstructing the view. Secondly, combining optical telescopes into a virtual super-telescope would not be feasible, according to the researchers.
Only very recent technological advances have made it possible to not only record radio waves at just the right wavelengths where they don't interfere with water vapor in the atmosphere but also to ensure the ultra-precise timing necessary to combine observations from multiple telescopes thousands of miles apart into one exposure.
Each telescope will record its data onto hard drives, which will be collected and physically shipped to a central data processing center at MIT's Haystack Observatory.
Bringing together radio telescopes around the globe requires an equally global team effort.
"This is not only the usual international conference where people come from all over the world because they are interested in sharing their research," Psaltis said. "For the Event Horizon Telescope, we need the entire world to come together to build this instrument because it is as big as the planet. People are coming from all over the world because they have to work on it."
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Jan 14, 2012
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Jan 14, 2012
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Synthetic images will be able to be composed from the observations, but VLB radio astronomy produces fringe maps in the direction of the baseline between two observatories. Fringe maps can be combined to produce representative images, but these images are not photographs and will miss observational details preferentially along unavailable baseline orientations.
19 micro arc seconds at a distance of 26,000 LY = 0.15 AU.
Jan 14, 2012
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Jan 14, 2012
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Jan 14, 2012
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This problem strikes to the very heart of what's wrong with science today: Rather than being honest about the confines and limitations imposed by the dominant theory such that the public can make an honest assessment of the theory itself, we instead encourage theorists to come up with creative solutions which are not even wrong. We can spin our wheels in this state for generations, if you guys let it happen -- or, we can actually attempt to achieve some ideational fluency, and explore competing scientific frameworks.
Who here even knows what the emerging electrical framework inference is? And doesn't anybody here see this as a problem?
Jan 14, 2012
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What we need instead of consensus is convergence. Convergence is not forced; it self-assembles. It also easily accommodates divergence from conventional wisdom, permitting a much wider breadth of conversation than we see with this existing attempt at a coherent cosmology.
Conventional theorists still imagine that their consensus is not the product of social forces. And yet, theories are the products of people. So long as they persist with such blatant denial, our attempts to explain nature will continue to be pathetic.
Jan 14, 2012
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Simultaneously, those who are more concerned with fitting into a social fabric than tracking down truth in science will not care that they have done so.
This is how we can stall science. The social structure will then determine the results.
Jan 14, 2012
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Jan 14, 2012
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Here's hoping it's somethinh else :-)
You see, if we just confirm existing theories - that's fine. But if we find something new - we find somthing new and that opens new and interesting possibilities.
Jan 14, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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"The title of this article, "Scientists gear up to take a picture of a black hole," lends the unfortunate impression with the public that it is possible to image a black hole" - Hannes
Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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Which raises other question - is a black hole 3-dimensional? In other words what does it (reportedly or best guess!) look like - edge on?
Jan 15, 2012
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Jan 15, 2012
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This is a common but absolutely groundless myth. Ask anyone who lives on or near equator. (BTW, just how near is near? Will 1m do? Or do we need to get to within 1mm of equator for the water to stop spinning?)
Jan 15, 2012
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The black hole should be three dimensional, not just a disk. But a pure black circle will look like a pure black sphere. If there is asymmetry, it may be due to the spin and the distortion that produces in space-time nearby.
Jan 15, 2012
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Ya, but with Black Holes it depends on which side of the Universe you are on.
Jan 15, 2012
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Thus, all you need to do to make a basic black hole is to pile enough stars together. Relativity changes the math and the appearance of the black hole, but the basic idea is the same.
So, yes, if gravity is universal, black holes, in some form, are certain to exist.
Jan 16, 2012
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Jan 16, 2012
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No, it's not the same.
In classical (Newtonian) physics the force of gravity affects only objects with mass. Since light diesn't have any it is exempt and should escape no matter whay.
Having said that, classical physics had a lot of trouble explaining the properties of light (or even what is) anyway so the whole issue becomes moot.
Jan 16, 2012
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When I posted the above, the page came back with the article but no comments and the page number in the header which normally shows "2 / 2" was showing... "NaN / 2".
Considering what that NaN stands for (Not a Number coming from the FPU, for those who don't know) that's very clearly a bug.
Jan 18, 2012
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I am sure we all agree.
The new response system has numerous bugs.
Jan 18, 2012
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Jan 19, 2012
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The resolving power of the ALMA array alone is insufficient to discern the event horizon in Sag A*, which has a much smaller apparent size than the Antennae galaxy(NGC 4038-39), despite the difference in distance. This is why very-long baseline interferometry (with an effective aperture of the Earth's diameter) is to be employed.
Jan 26, 2012
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Jan 26, 2012
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