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  • Telescopes Unite in Unprecedented Observations of Famous Black Hole
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Telescopes Unite in Unprecedented Observations of Famous Black Hole

Object Details

Views
900
Video Title
Telescopes Unite in Unprecedented Observations of Famous Black Hole
Description
In April 2019, the Event Horizon Telescope project released the first direct image of a black hole in the galaxy M87. The series of images in this video represent an extensive observing campaign by telescopes around the globe and in space of M87's black hole and the region around it. These telescopes, which included NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, cover the entire spectrum of light from radio waves to gamma rays. The images also range in scale from a fraction of a light year to hundreds of thousands of light years. These combined data will help scientists gain crucial insight into the black hole's properties. More at: https://chandra.si.edu/photo/2021/m87/ Video compilation: NASA/GSFC/SVS/M.Subbarao & NASA/CXC/SAO/A.Jubett Image credit: The EHT Multi-wavelength Science Working Group, the collaborations of the EHT, EAVN, H.E.S.S., MAGIC and VERITAS; EVN; VLBA; GMVA; HST; Swift; Chandra; NuSTAR; Fermi; NASA, ESA and ESO. Visual Description: M87 Black Hole This release features a video that takes us through visual representations of data collected by 19 of the world's most powerful telescopes. The telescopes, which together collect light from across the spectrum, were part of a coordinated observation. At various times between late March and early May of 2017, the telescopes were all used to observe the famous supermassive black hole at the center of the M87 galaxy, about 55 million light-years from Earth. The video slowly zooms out through images representing data from the different types of telescopes. As we zoom out, more of the black hole enters the frame. We start with an image that resembles a glowing orange donut, brighter on the bottom than on top, floating in the black of space. Titles indicate that this represents Radio data from the Event Horizon Telescope. The faint outline of a square appears over top of the donut shape. Onscreen text indicates that each side of this square represents a distance of 0.01 light-years. As the video zooms out, the donut becomes a dot inside a bright vertical oval with a white core and yellow and orange outer rings. We zoom out further, and the oval and its pale orange companion shapes recede into the distance, replaced by a brilliant white dome shape nearing 1 light-year across. A mottled white and orange pattern streaks from the dome toward our upper right, like a tail. This is a jet of particles traveling at the speed of light, powered by the black hole. A zigzagging pattern inside the jet becomes apparent when it nears 10 light-years in length. When we zoom out further such that the white dome shape and the bright orange jet is approximately 100 light-years long, it presents as a solid streak. When we zoom out further, the black hole becomes a brilliant white egg-shape nearing 1,000 light-years in length. At this point, the video splits into three vertical panels. On our left are representations from radio telescopes, presented in oranges and whites against a black background. On our right are representations of X-ray data, presented as purple and white shapes on a black background. And in the middle are visible light images which feature white shapes on a sky blue background. In all three representations, the jet continues to extend toward our upper right. A representation of the black hole's gamma ray emissions then eclipses the three vertical panels. It now resembles a glowing white ball surrounded by an irregular neon purple ring, which measures almost 1,000,000 light-years across. At this point, the video stops zooming out, and pauses on this image from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. In the final seconds of the video, we quickly zoom back in, repeating much of the video in reverse.
Video Duration
1 min 11 sec
YouTube Keywords
astronomy space telescope astrophysics science
Data Source
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
YouTube Channel
cxcpub
Uploaded
2021-04-14T13:00:01.000Z
Creator
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Type
YouTube Videos
See more by
cxcpub
YouTube Category
Science & Technology
Topic
Astronomy
Record ID
yt_3HObWCXQK7s
Usage
Usage conditions apply
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
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Open daily 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Admission is always free!

2 Massachusetts Ave., N.E.
Washington, DC 20002

Our entrance is on the corner of First Street and Massachusetts Avenue NE.

street map of Postal museum

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