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Einstein predicted black holes and didn't believe they were possible himself!
It was Michell who, in a paper for the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, read on 27 November 1783, first proposed the idea that there were such things as black holes, which he called "dark stars"
originally posted by: bobs_uruncle
originally posted by: Phantom423
a reply to: bobs_uruncle
The black hole is in M87 - the Messier Galaxy, not the Milky Way, which is our galaxy. I don't know the geometry of this black hole relative to its galaxy equator. Actually, I was wondering today why they chose M87 and not the Milky Way black hole.
The answers are probably in the six research papers which I intend to read over the next few weeks.
Right now there's a lot of reading to be done, a lot of questions to be asked. That's the fun part!
Last I checked our central black hole in our galaxy has an alleged acreation disk parallel with the galactic plane which would be difficult to resolve, since we are basically on the same galactic plane. Looking at another galaxy like m87 would probably give a clearer view of a galactic centre and its carnivore.
Cheers - Dave
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: bobs_uruncle
originally posted by: Phantom423
a reply to: bobs_uruncle
The black hole is in M87 - the Messier Galaxy, not the Milky Way, which is our galaxy. I don't know the geometry of this black hole relative to its galaxy equator. Actually, I was wondering today why they chose M87 and not the Milky Way black hole.
The answers are probably in the six research papers which I intend to read over the next few weeks.
Right now there's a lot of reading to be done, a lot of questions to be asked. That's the fun part!
Last I checked our central black hole in our galaxy has an alleged acreation disk parallel with the galactic plane which would be difficult to resolve, since we are basically on the same galactic plane. Looking at another galaxy like m87 would probably give a clearer view of a galactic centre and its carnivore.
Cheers - Dave
Even if the plane of the accretion disk was on edge from our viewpoint, the black hole's gravity would bend the light of the accretion disk behind it so that light appears above and below the black hole.
This video describes that, first by showing what we would see if a black hole's accretion disk is perpendicular to or point of view, but then (starting at the 6:38 mark) what it would look like viewed from any random angle, such as edge on.
Source: bigleaguepolitics.com...
As the mainstream media attempts to give researcher Katie Bouman credit for the first “photos” of a black hole, it appears her role may have been mostly supervisory, and that other researchers did the majority of the leg work.
According to data provided publicly by GitHub, Bouman made 2,410 contributions to the over 900,000 lines of code required to create the first-of-its-kind black hole image, or 0.26 per cent. Bouman’s contributions also occurred toward the end of the work on the code.
That’s completely wrong, Chael said in a Twitter thread of his own that went viral Thursday. Not only are the claims in the meme flat-out incorrect, but Chael – as an openly gay man – is also part of an underrepresented demographic in his field.
“While I appreciate the congratulations on a result that I worked hard on for years, if you are congratulating me because you have a sexist vendetta against Katie, please go away and reconsider your priorities in life,” he tweeted....
...Chael said. He certainly didn’t write “850,000 lines of code,” a false number likely pulled from GitHub, a Web-based coding service. And while he was the primary author of one piece of software that worked on imaging the black hole, the team used multiple different approaches to avoid bias. His work was important, but Bouman’s was also vital as she helped stitch together all the teams, Chael said.
In truth, singling out any one scientist in a massive, cross-disciplinary group effort like the Event Horizon Telescope’s project is bound to create misapprehensions. Many who shared an equally viral image of Bouman clutching her hands in joy at the sight of the black hole came away wrongly believing she was the sole person responsible for the discovery, an idea the postdoctoral researcher at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has tried to correct.
“No one algorithm or person made this image,” Bouman wrote on Facebook, “it required the amazing talent of a team of scientists from around the globe and years of hard work to develop the instrument, data processing, imaging methods, and analysis techniques that were necessary to pull off this seemingly impossible feat.”