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Fifty Observatories Worldwide Unite to Capture Single Image of Black Hole

First-ever photograph of invisible object

University of Arizona
Mon, 01/23/2012 - 12:06
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Astronomers, physicists, and scientists from related fields across the world convened in Tucson, Arizona on Jan. 18, 2012, to discuss an endeavor that only a few years ago would have been regarded as nothing less than outrageous.

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The conference is organized by Dimitrios Psaltis, an associate professor of astrophysics at the University of Arizona’s Steward Observatory, and Dan Marrone, an assistant professor of astronomy at Steward Observatory.

“Nobody has ever taken a picture of a black hole,” says Psaltis. “We are going to do just that.”

“Even five years ago, such a proposal would not have seemed credible,” says Sheperd Doeleman, assistant director of the Haystack Observatory at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), who is the principal investigator of the Event Horizon Telescope, as the project is dubbed. “Now we have the technological means to take a stab at it.”

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