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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1554992832.jpg |
Ok. The subject of this alleged ‘photo’ of the ‘shadow’ of a black hole is 55 million light years away. I can’t think of any other object, even one that weighs 6.5 billion solar masses and is larger than the orbit of Neptune X4, that is more irrelevant to life on this planet.
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I gotta go along with crowbob on this one. |
How about doing something for the sake of scientific discovery? We are inherently inquisitive creatures and the wonders of the universe are magnificent.
Perhaps to some this might appear to be a waste. But, peel the onion back to reveal a truly beautiful thing, perhaps only in a theoretical or abstract way. Try a little introspection or maybe some abstract thought exercises to expand oneself, realize that we insignificant in the grand plan and are surrounded by beauty of all type, even mathematics ahs a beauty to it. But, alas, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Some think a painting of dogs playing cards at a table is equal to a work by Michelangelo. Proving that there are those that get it and others not so much, short-sightedness perhaps. Cheers |
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I suppose the black thing in the center is the black hole although we really aren’t seeing it, as by definition it has no image. |
The best scientific link, with links to 6 published scientific papers:
facts and data. not USA today. https://iopscience.iop.org/journal/2041-8205/page/Focus_on_EHT |
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Event Horizon may have blown it's top as recently as when the dinosaurs roamed here and we still wouldn't know it. This object has less relevance to life on this planet than the effect a single grain of sand has on the rotation of the earth. Considering the thing is more than four times the size of Neptune's orbit and not even light can escape it when its asleep, imagine the chaos for us were it to decide to pop 55 million light years away. Clue: NONE. |
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Scientifically, however, the only thing it does is confirm what we have pretty much already known. That the universe is big and contains many objects strange. Philosophically, it's major achievment is to rudely remind us of our own irrelevance. Which brings me back to my point. |
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the edge of the shadow is the smallest diameter which allows coherent light to travel from the region around the black hole to us. Outside of the shadow, the spacetime twisting effects drop off until you get a "normal" image of photos traveling straight lines through space (this would be dozens or hundreds of times further away than what they're showing in all of these pictures). Closer than the shadow, spacetime is so twisted that photons coming from behind the black hole are sent back towards where they came, or worse. Once you reach the event horizon, photons at a grazing angle go into an infinite orbit and are "lost" forever. So, the shadow is the minimum distance where we can actually get photons to land on an imager in any coherent manner. What you are seeing at the actual edge of the shadow is photons coming into the area of the blackhole from all sorts of directions, being bent towards us. The parameters of that light will be completely blended (wavelength, polarization, amplitude, etc) because it's a mix of light from all areas of the sky. |
https://youtu.be/M1_HT3NdiXY?t=1538
Start watching here, but around minute 27:20 they show a simulation showing the paths of photons around the black hole. You can see how tehy end up populating an area that looks like a ring around the black hole, but none are inside a certain diameter. THAT is the shadow, where the light cannot be closer and travel in coherent directions. |
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Really? I hadn’t noticed. |
So, what you're saying is that the shadow is the hole in the donut and that the black hole is a little tiny area inside the donut hole, like say, a BB in the center of the hole?
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One simple example, the GPS itself. Real world day to day impact on most Americans and first world countries. Without the math of relativity and the method to calculate the effect of the speed of the GPS satellite every GPS would be off my over 1/2 a mile per day. Einstein was a genius, but he never dreamed of a GPS system. The new math and algorithms and methods of making the photo of a black hole will be applied to other systems. Who knows, but it could help in many medical fields in ways that saves real lives, even yours. Like every scientific endeavor it is added to, incorporated into other systems and soon is the standard way to do things, or disproved and discarded. Science was the core and foundation of ALL medicine. Only by researching one thing, and discovering other things do we as humans advance. We all want medical science to advance and get more effective. |
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-47891902
I really like this photo: <blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Left: MIT computer scientist Katie Bouman w/stacks of hard drives of black hole image data. <br><br>Right: MIT computer scientist Margaret Hamilton w/the code she wrote that helped put a man on the moon.<br><br>(image credit <a href="https://twitter.com/floragraham?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@floragraham</a>)<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/EHTblackhole?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#EH Tblackhole</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BlackHoleDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Bl ackHoleDay</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/BlackHole?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Black Hole</a> <a href="https://t.co/Iv5PIc8IYd">pic.twitter.com/Iv5PIc8IYd</a></p>— MIT CSAIL (@MIT_CSAIL) <a href="https://twitter.com/MIT_CSAIL/status/1116007460039483392?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 10, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
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Thanks for clearing up the use of the word shadow. I guess the usage was similar to radar shadow, rain shadow, etc.... not what we normally think of when we hear shadow. I was first thinking more along the lines of silhouette, than shadow.... Astronomy and some branches of physics often make my head hurt. |
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It was the right size, and was part of the verification of the theory. As an aside, we know the true size of the event horizon even though it's hidden because the same rules of relativity define the event horizon based on a few very basic facts (mass, spin, charge) of the black hole, all of which can be calculated separately and accurately. |
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