Science

Astronomers reveal first photograph of a monster black hole at the heart of our galaxy

In another historic first, astronomers using the Event Horizon Telescope have taken the first image of the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole, named Sagittarius A*.

It is the first direct evidence of the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy

This is the first image of Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy. It’s the first direct visual evidence of the presence of this black hole. It was captured by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array that linked together eight existing radio observatories across the planet to form a single 'Earth-sized' virtual telescope. (EHT Collaboration)

More than 27,000 light-years away, at the heart of our galaxy, lies a supermassive black hole, one that is more than four million times the mass of our sun. It has never been seen.

Until today.

Astronomers using the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) have taken the first image of the Milky Way's supermassive black hole, named Sagittarius A*.

Astronomers have long speculated about a black hole at our galaxy's centre. Observations of stars near the core showed them orbiting something invisible, which suggested a black hole. Today's image release is a confirmation.

The results were published today in a special issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Black holes are relatively small, invisible, extremely dense regions of space with a gravitational field where anything that crosses their threshold — known as the event horizon — gets pulled in, never to return. This includes light, which is why they are so notoriously difficult to detect, unless they're interacting with a nearby star.

However, in 2019, the EHT — an organization of more than 200 astronomers from around the world, including Canada — released a historic first photograph of a black hole at the centre of another galaxy, Messier 87 (M87), that showed the shadow of the black hole with its surrounding gas illuminated.

Size comparison of the two black holes imaged by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration: M87*, at the heart of the galaxy Messier 87, and Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), at the centre of the Milky Way. The image shows the scale of Sgr A* in comparison with both M87* and other elements of the solar system such as the orbits of Pluto and Mercury. (EHT Collaboration)

Like M87, the newly published image shows the hot material surrounding the shadow of Sagittarius A* (pronounced Sagittarius A-star). 

Astronomers also revealed that Sagittarius A* is spinning — which was unknown before this image — and is tilted so that it is facing us edge on.

As for how much is falling into it, astronomer and EHT collaborator Sara Issaoun said that comparatively, it would be like a human eating one grain of rice once every million years.

The image was made using eight radio telescopes in six sites around the world: Chile, Mexico, Spain, Hawaii, Arizona and even the South Pole. Used together, they act as a giant, Earth-sized telescope capable of obtaining much more detailed images. The data for both M87 and Sagittarius A* were collected in 2017.

More than pretty pictures, the data collected may shed light not only on the formation of supermassive black holes but also the role they played in the early universe and the role they continue to play at the heart of galaxies, most of which are home to these puzzling structures.

That's the hope, anyway, of astronomers and astrophysicists around the world.

WATCH | Scientists reveal 1st image of Milky Way's black hole

Astronomers reveal 1st photo of black hole at the centre of the Milky Way

3 years ago
Duration 2:05
Astronomers using the Event Horizon Telescope have revealed the first image of the Milky Way's supermassive black hole, named Sagittarius A*.

Ue-Li Pen, an astrophysicist and collaborating scientist on the Event Horizon Telescope project, compared these new images and the data collected to the difference between reconstructing a dinosaur from what we understand to actually seeing one.

"I think the analogy to dinosaurs, it's not that different," said Pen, who is also a professor at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Toronto. "[It's] a little bit like seeing a live dinosaur in your neighbour's backyard: we can't actually touch it yet. But it's so much closer and so much newer — and so much more alive than everything before that."

The challenges of getting these images

Creating imaging of the two black holes presented different challenges. In the case of M87, its black hole is one of the most massive known. It's six billion times more massive than our sun and 1,500 times more massive than Sagittarius A*. It also lies 2,000 times farther away than Sagittarius A*. 

With Sagittarius A*, while closer, it is along the galactic plane, which means the telescopes needed to peer through thick gas, dust and plasma. As well, its black hole is smaller, measuring 4.3 million times the mass of the sun.

A blurry, glowing image of yellow and orange gas surrounds a black hole in outer space.
This is the first image ever taken of the event horizon of a supermassive black hole, captured by the Event Horizon Telescope in 2017. (Event Horizon Telescope)

"For Sagittarius A* it is … almost 2,000 times smaller [than M87], and that means light zips around it in 2,000 times less time," said Avery Broderick, an associate professor at Waterloo University, associate faculty member at the Perimeter Institute and a member of the EHT team. "That's about 15 minutes. So every 15 minutes a day, it starts presenting us with a new face."

He compares looking through all the plasma, dust and gas to looking through an ice-covered window.

"That's pretty much what radio astronomy through the galactic plane looks like — the flotsam and jetsam of the galaxies is playing the role of the ice and blurs and variegates the images," he said.

"So solving that problem, we can play some games to remove the blurring. But addressing how to deal with the kind of rippling effect that you see, that was one of the things we had to figure out how to do efficiently, so that we could produce an image that showed what the source looked like."

'Unlike anything else'

Black holes have a fascinating history. They were first predicted by theoretical physicist Albert Einstein in his theory of general relativity in 1915. Even though his own calculations predicted them, Einstein didn't believe that nature could crush something with the mass of a star into such a compact space. However, astronomer and physicist Karl Schwarzschild, who was fighting in the trenches on the German front during the First World War, managed to prove that they could indeed exist. 

So this new image is yet another testament to Einstein's theory of general relativity, Broderick said.

This illustration shows how astronomers are able to photograph black holes. (ESO )

"The fact that the shadows are the right size, I think, is an incredible confirmation that Einstein's theory of gravity, Einstein's general relativity is still batting 1,000," he said. "It's still answering every question put to it accurately, which, sometimes, is frustrating, because we're always looking for something, something new and different."

Janna Levin, who was not involved in the EHT announcement, is a renowned astronomer who has made it her life's work to learn as much as possible about black holes. 

This 2018 time-lapse video from the ESO's Very Large Telescope in Chile shows stars orbiting the supermassive black hole that lies at the heart of the Milky Way over a period of nearly 20 years. (European Southern Observatory)

"Stars can be different in lots of ways. Black holes cannot. Black holes are almost like a fundamental particle in the same way an electron is like a fundamental particle," said Levin, who is a professor of physics and astronomy at Barnard College of Columbia University in New York and the author of Black Hole Survival Guide

"If I have a black hole that has a certain charge, electrical charge, like static electricity and a certain mass, and it's spinning a certain way, it is absolutely indistinguishable from any other black hole. With those three numbers — three numbers, that's it — you could not tell if that black hole was made out of antimatter, out of dark matter, out of encyclopedias, out of ghosts, out of stars, out of photons. 

"They reveal nothing about themselves."

Our fascination with black holes

Regardless if we'd seen them or not, black holes have long captured the public's imagination. In 1979, Disney made what is today regarded as a notoriously bad movie called The Black Hole. And these gravitational monsters continued to appear in movies, most recently the 2014 drama Interstellar

It's thanks to that movie that we got our first real idea of what a black hole might look like. Nobel Prize-winning astrophysicist Kip Thorne ran calculations on a supercomputer to try to present a realistic vision of what a black hole might look like. The result was a shadow of a black hole with light bending around it due to its massive gravity, called gravitational lensing. When the image of M87 was released, it almost matched that perfectly.

Both Broderick and Pen believe that better understanding black holes will, in turn, help us better understand gravity as a whole.

"Why does it matter in a broader sense? Well, I kind of get philosophical on that point," Broderick said. "We live now in this information age, I'm talking to you, over Zoom, and my computer's on the Wi-Fi, communicating with some other computer that gets beamed around the world to you. And that all operates because of Maxwell's equations, James Clerk Maxwell wrote down some description of electromagnetism.

"I don't know any more than Maxwell could have predicted cell phones, what the gravity age will provide. We might all be flying around in Jetson-like cars because of it, or you might be warping across the universe."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nicole Mortillaro

Senior Science Reporter

Based in Toronto, Nicole covers all things science for CBC News. As an amateur astronomer, Nicole can be found looking up at the night sky appreciating the marvels of our universe. She is the editor of the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the author of several books. In 2021, she won the Kavli Science Journalism Award from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for a Quirks and Quarks audio special on the history and future of Black people in science. You can send her story ideas at nicole.mortillaro@cbc.ca.