The first photo of a black hole is finally here

National Science Foundation(WASHINGTON) — We finally know what a black hole looks like.

After decades of conjecture and simulations, an international consortium of scientists released the first ever photo of a black hole on Wednesday.

We have seen what we thought was unseeable. We have seen and taken a picture of a black hole,” Shep Doeleman, Event Horizon Telescope project (EHT) director, said as he revealed the photos at a press conference on Wednesday in Washington, D.C.

The EHT is a global network of radio dishes that effectively turn Earth into a virtual telescope. In addition to the briefing in Washington, there were simultaneous announcements in Brussels, Santiago, Shanghai, Taipei and Tokyo.

Black holes are so massive they warp space and time and allow no light to escape. Even though a black hole itself is not visible directly, the photos confirmed expectations it would be surrounded by dust and gas swirling around it at velocities near the speed of light, which causes the detectable emission of radiation. The event horizon is the boundary of a black hole from which even light cannot escape.

“This has been our first chance to see the inner workings of black holes and to test a fundamental prediction of Einstein’s theory of General Relativity. Not only the existence of a shadow that indicates a point of no return — or an event horizon — but also the size and shape of that shadow,” Feryal Ozel, an astrophysicist at the University of Arizona who was the modeling and analysis lead on the project, told ABC News.

“It’s a dream come true, on many levels,” Ozel said. “Something I’ve been working on for many, many years, trying to build a physical model of a black hole environment and predictions, and the opportunity to study the hearts of black holes is amazing. This kind of resolution in astronomy is unprecedented. This is up to a million times better than some other telescopes.”

Doeleman added that the photo was consistent with the simulations and predictions based on Albert Einstein’s calculations.

The EHT project embarked on a 10-day mission in April 2017 to “capture the image of the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy,” according to an National Science Foundation press release at the time.

“Obtaining an image of a black hole is not as easy as snapping a photo with an ordinary camera,” the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, a U.S. research center, wrote on its website. “The supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, called Sagittarius A*, has a mass of approximately four million times that of the Sun, but it only looks like a tiny dot from Earth, 26,000 light-years away.”

Copyright © 2019, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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