The pop eroticismfirst image of a black hole just became even more fascinating.
At the center of the Messier 87 (M87) galaxy is a supermassive black hole about 38 billion kilometers wide, a behemoth so dense that not even light can escape its gravitational pull.
By observing polarized light around M87, scientists working with Event Horizon Telescope, an international collaboration of researchers, were able to produce the image. It shows the spiral-like pattern of the black hole's magnetic fields, the first image of its kind.
The light comes from the superheated gas caught in the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return from which not even light can escape. It traveled 55 million light years to reach Earth.
The image can give the illusion of light being sucked into the center of the black hole, like water swirling down a drain, but that's not quite the case.
What it's really showing are magnetic field lines, Erin Macdonald said in an interview. Macdonald has a doctorate in astrophysics and is a science consultant for recent Star Trek productions.
Confused? Think about polarized sunglasses. They use a filter reminiscent of window blinds that only allows light waves traveling in a specific orientation to pass through.
"Light is really electromagnetic waves, and electromagnetic waves are shaped like a cross or an X," Macdonald said, crossing her arms perpendicularly. "When you're getting light from the sun, that's natural light, and that goes in all directions. When you use polarized sunglasses, it's filtering all the light shaped opposite of where your filters are [oriented]."
Filtering the light allowed scientists to view the electromagnetic radiation aligning itself along the black hole's magnetic field lines.
Macdonald compared it to using a magnet to manipulate iron filings. When iron is in the presence of a magnetic field, it will align itself along field lines, revealing the otherwise invisible influence. In the case of the M87 black hole, just replace iron with light.
"By seeing how the magnetic field is structured, we can see how strong it is and can then start to dig more information out about that black hole," Macdonald said. "We do have great models using Einstein's general relativity for what the structure of a black hole should look like, and getting this level of detail and information allows us to compare and contrast those models that we have."
The original image of the black hole released in 2019 was created using a network of eight telescopes around the globe. They started recording the data for it in 2017.
That data was stitched together into an image that, while a bit blurry, is still impressive considering the vast distance.
This new polarized image is the first piece of additional information to come out of this observation, about two years after the initial image. The amount of data collected in those observations is immense, and while Macdonald isn't involved with the project, she wouldn't be surprised if more information came out in the future.
SEE ALSO: How black holes can spaghettify stars that fall too close"I can only imagine that there's more data that people are continuing to analyze and piece together, and finding new ways to convey it," she said.
12 of the most ridiculous 999 calls received by London police in 2016Rescued pigs frolic like puppies towards their human when calledHow college football's biggest stars are changing the game by sitting outThis country is waging a war against FacebookIt was HothLuckiest Redditor ever got Bill Gates as her Secret SantaLondoners' holiday messages to Syrian refugees will make you cryCats on Instagram wish you a meowy Christmas and a happy mew yearA guide to Trump's alarming cabinet full of climate deniers21 incredible innovations that improved the world in 2016Twitter has a field day noting the glaring plot holes in 'Home Alone'Warm ocean water is melting East Antarctica's largest glacierThis proposal photo has the internet totally delightedRise Nation overcomes mass player defection to win 'Call of Duty' tourneyPaypal accuses India's largest mobile wallet company of copying its logoMake your holidays delightfully weird with a choir singing Christmas carols like goatsYou’re secretly being trained to break your iPhone on purpose7 can't miss apps: 'Dots & Co.,' Facetune 2, Triller and moreA chance encounter at a ChickFans go wild for kid on JumboTron; boo relentlessly when he isn't Shop the best deals on tablets this week Wordle today: The answer and hints for August 8 Disney+ and Hulu have just gotten pricier Best gaming deals of the week — August 2024 Apple is about to smallify its Mac mini even more This week's best Ninja deals [August 2024] Best home security deals: Save big on wireless doorbells, cameras, and more. Best headphones and earbuds deals: Shop Sony, Bose, and Apple NYT Strands hints, answers for August 7 6 overlooked and underrated road trip essentials 'Love Is Blind UK' gets real about endometriosis Best unlocked phone deals this week 'Democracy manifest' diner from viral 'succulent Chinese meal' video has died Germany vs. Greece Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live basketball for free Get up to 33% off OLED TVs during Samsung OLED week Reddit CEO hints that subreddit paywalls are on the way Elon Musk tweeted this far Grindr at the Paris Olympics: Protecting LGBTQ+ athletes' privacy and safety Elon Musk's X is suing advertisers over ad boycott How Elon Musk and X's decision to sue advertisers may have just backfired
1.3255s , 10195.625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【pop eroticism】,Exquisite Information Network