First image of black hole helps turn science fiction into fact: Canadian researcher
A global team of scientists that included a Canadian researcher allowed the world to “see the unseeable” on Wednesday, revealing the first ever captured image of a black hole.
The picture, depicting an orange and black ring of gravity-twisted light around the edge of an abyss, came about as a result of an international collaboration of more than 200 academics and images compiled from eight Earth-based telescopes positioned around the world.
Avery Broderick, an associate professor at Ontario’s University of Waterloo and faculty member at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, said the image helped convert science fiction into “science fact” while bolstering theories at the core of modern physics.
“This is the first time that we’ve been able to push Einstein’s theory of gravity down to the edge of the observable universe,” Broderick told The Canadian Press in a phone interview from Washington, D.C., hours after the image was unveiled.