The first picture of a black hole opens a new era of astrophysics The supermassive beast lies in a galaxy called M87 more than 50 million light-years away This is what a black hole looks like. A world-spanning network of telescopes called the Event Horizon Telescope zoomed in on the supermassive monster in the galaxy M87 to create this first-ever picture of a black hole. “We have seen what we thought was unseeable. We have seen and taken a picture of a black hole,” Sheperd Doeleman, EHT Director and astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., said April 10 in Washington, D.C., at one of seven concurrent news conferences. The results were also published in six papers in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. “We’ve been studying black holes so long, sometimes it’s easy to forget that none of us have actually seen one,” France Cordova, director of the National Science Foundation, said in the Washington, D.C., news conference. Seeing one “is a Herculean task,” she said. That's because black holes are notoriously hard to see. Their gravity is so extreme that nothing, not even light, can escape across the boundary at a black hole's edge, known as the event horizon. But some black holes, especially supermassive ones dwelling in galaxies’ centers, stand out by voraciously accreting bright disks of gas and other material. The EHT image reveals the shadow of M87’s black hole on its accretion disk. Appearing as a fuzzy, asymmetrical ring, it unveils for the first time a dark abyss of one of the universe’s most mysterious objects. “That’s fantastic,” says physicist Clifford Will of the University of Florida in Gainesville who is not on the EHT team. “Being able to actually see this shadow and to detect it is a tremendous first step.” The image aligns with expectations of what a black hole should look like based on Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which predicts how spacetime is warped by the extreme mass of a black hole. The picture is “one more strong piece of evidence supporting the existence of black holes. And that, of course, helps verify general relativity,” Will says. https://www.sciencenews.org/article...ddit&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=r_science
Doesn't look very "black" to me. And if there's "global warming," why is it cold today? Science really can't be trusted.
Millennial Blazers fans reference Raymond Felton and doughnuts. Old school fans (by which I mean fans like me who started caring about the Blazers when Pippen joined...) reference Shawn Kemp.
It was a joke, yo. I had no idea what age you were. Just that I remember when Kemp was the go-to reference for Kripsy Kreme. Then it became Felton.
Here's the question - Could Sly's supermassive butt swallow a supermassive black hole? I say yes, what say ye?
Sure, but high density gravitational structures that warp space-time do exist. Or is the Trump doctrine that gravity doesn't exist?