Here's a simulation of what the Event Horizon Team thought the black hole would look like. And here's the real image. The light you see here is what's called the accretion disk. It's a disk of ...
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are among the most energetic phenomena observed in the universe. These luminous objects, powered ...
A remarkable black hole, located 270 million light-years away in the Draco constellation, has become the center of ...
Scientists have published a spectacular new polarised light image of the strong magnetic fields spiraling from the edge of the black hole at the center of our galaxy. Seen in polarised light for ...
The photo is of the radio emissions caused by the active feeding of the black hole. According to astronomers, the image spans that of 16 full Moons side by side. According to the release ...
Astronomers have witnessed a monster supermassive black hole erupting with a light-year-long jet traveling at one-third the speed of light.
Galactic nuclei images reveal how supermassive black holes interact with their surroundings using infrared telescopes.
The first black hole that astronomers observed "turning off" just turned back on, releasing jets of hot gas into the cosmos.
A team that included University of Arizona astronomers captured the infrared image of the supermassive black hole using a Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer.
After decades of study, scientists sound genuinely optimistic about the possibility of detecting primordial black holes, which might explain dark matter.
According to Heino Falcke, a Radio Astronomy Professors, “With them, you can take near perfect images to see the real details of black holes. If small deviations from Einstein's theory occur ...
A large international team of scientists observed a rare event in real time: a dramatic increase in radio emission and the ...