New Event Horizon Telescope Images Show Massive Black Hole Shooting Powerful Cosmic Jets

Capturing stunning images in 16x better quality than previous telescopes.

Artist’s impression of a galaxy forming stars within powerful outflows of material blasted out from supermassive black holes at its core. Results from ESO’s Very Large Telescope are the first confirmed observations of stars forming in this kind of extreme environment. The discovery has many consequences for understanding galaxy properties and evolution.
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The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) captured the highest resolution images to exist of a powerful cosmic jet blasting from a massive black hole, according to a new study published in Nature Astronomy on Monday.

Using the EHT — the telescope responsible for obtaining the first-ever image of a black hole — researchers could observe jet emissions from the black hole at the center of the Centaurus A galaxy in greater detail, specifically with 10 times higher accuracy and with 16 times sharper resolution than before.

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The images show the jet with a dark center lined with two bright stripes, which scientists suggest might result from its outer regions interacting with surrounding gas and dust. They facilitated the groundbreaking observations by the EHT collaboration, which unites eight radio observatories across the globe to work in tandem as one Earth-sized telescope.

“This allows us for the first time to see and study an extragalactic radio jet on scales smaller than the distance light travels in one day, We see up close and personal how a monstrously gigantic jet launched by a supermassive black hole is being born.”Michael Janssen of the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy

Centaurus A — a sprawling elliptical galaxy in the constellation Centaurus — was identified in 1949 to be the first known source of radio waves outside of Earth’s galaxy, the Milky Way.

“Centaurus A is our close neighbor in the intergalactic sense; it’s only about 10 million light years away,” said Maciek Wielgus, a co-author of the study and researcher at the Center for Astrophysics at Harvard & Smithsonian, in the statement. “And its central region differs greatly from our own galactic center; there’s so much more power emerging from the nucleus of Centaurus A.”

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Following the high-resolution images of Centaurus A’s jets, EHT scientists are now focused on capturing a video of the black hole located at the center of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A, in order to get a better understanding of its surrounding environment.

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