Sometime today NASA will be releasing images of Sagittarius A, the black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy. (No Mars bar jokes please). Brilliant science to gather and correlate the info using radio telescopes across the World that were synced with an atomic clock. It has taken 2 years to put the image together and I for one can't wait to see it. The link below contains some useful explanations of why and how it was done, and rather good explanatory videos.
According to Dr Mark Morris “There is a speed limit to the spin of a black hole. It’s sort of set by the faster a black hole spins, the smaller is its event horizon.” https://www.universetoday.com/109308/how-fast-do-black-holes-spin/
//The image shows an intensely bright "ring of fire", as Prof Falcke describes it, surrounding a perfectly circular dark hole. The bright halo is caused by superheated gas falling into the hole. The light is brighter than all the billions of other stars in the galaxy combined - which is why it can be seen at such distance from Earth.//
Fascinating stuff... I would like to point out though that M87 is a galaxy far, far away please forgive me and not the centre of our galaxy named the milky way as posted by Togo in his OP.
'Sagittarius A, the black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy.'
Yes Arks it is indeed. All the info was indicating a picture of Sagittarius A but the accompanying script with the released picture says that it is harder to image that black hole than the bigger distant one with its accompanying "halo".
> The bright halo is caused by superheated gas falling into the hole. The light is brighter than all the billions of other stars in the galaxy combined
My first thoughts are that this gas should surround the black hole, which means that we should not be able to see the black hole, only a giant ball of gas. I'll investigate more later ...
Ellipsis, listening to a Radio 4 report a little while ago I think they said the light is actually light in the process of being sucked into the black hole.
But if we can see light around the black hole, why can't we see light in front of, and therefore obscuring, the black hole? I'm sure there's a good explanation, I just can't think of it right now.
Wouldn't it be something if we were actually looking at the BACK of the black hole and seeing a halo of the light being sucked into the open end? Like looking at a tube blocked at one end and open at the other. Just musing.
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