Monday, September 16, 2024

The 1st Milky Way black hole image was groundbreaking — the next could be even better

NASAThe 1st Milky Way black hole image was groundbreaking — the next could be even better


The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), which is a collaboration of radio telescopes all around the world that operate in unison to image supermassive black holes, has achieved its finest resolution yet. In the future, this accomplishment could lead to images of the ring of light around a black hole’s event horizon that are 50% sharper, resolving hitherto unseen details and producing movies of how the black holes change as they spin. 

The EHT works on the principle of “very long baseline interferometry,” or VLBI for short. This involves tapping into a network of telescopes across continents that all work collectively to observe the same object, combining their data in the process. The wider the distance between the two farthest telescopes in the network, the greater the resolution, and the more telescopes there are in the network, the greater the sensitivity.

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