![]() |
Image Source - Event Horizon Telescope |
The Event Horizon Telescope has captured the first ever direct photograph of the black hole and it has sent the entire world in tizz. The black hole is located at the center of the Messier 87 galaxy, which is over 50 million light years away from earth. And as usual, the Twiterattis couldn't keep a hold of themselves.
I knew I've seen it somewhere before... #blackhole pic.twitter.com/hN4Wupbsh7
— 9GAG (@9GAG) April 10, 2019
This is the first-ever image of a black hole pic.twitter.com/m4Z14AxAui
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) April 10, 2019
It's not a hot doughnut or the Eye of Sauron.
— Curiosity Rover (@MarsCuriosity) April 10, 2019
This is the first image ever of a black hole.
Supermassive congratulations to the whole @ehtelescope team. What can be accomplished by people and telescopes around the world working together is truly awesome. https://t.co/QYgEsvccXc pic.twitter.com/IqE4h4OXTR
If you think the picture of the black hole is cool, wait till next week, when you get to photograph it from the inside.
— God (@TheTweetOfGod) April 10, 2019
The first-ever image of a black hole. pic.twitter.com/B6nTFRhMf0
— RΛMIN NΛSIBOV (@RaminNasibov) April 10, 2019
INCREDIBLE! A team of more than 200 scientists used eight telescopes to capture the FIRST EVER image of a black hole – and it’s 50 million light-years from Earth! #BlackHoles https://t.co/d6kNWdi1bA
— Buzz Aldrin (@TheRealBuzz) April 10, 2019
The black hole for all our dieting plans #EHTBlackHole pic.twitter.com/50uxZsdODo
— Zomato India (@ZomatoIN) April 10, 2019
The sweetest entity in the cosmos. Thankfully not 55 light-years away. #blackhole pic.twitter.com/dDCLKU4RKq
— Dunkin' (@dunkindonuts) April 10, 2019
In a historic feat by @EHTelescope & @NSF, a black hole image has been captured for the 1st time. Several of our missions observed the same black hole using different light wavelengths and collected data to understand the black hole's environment. Details: https://t.co/WOjLdY76ve pic.twitter.com/4PhH1bfHxc
— NASA (@NASA) April 10, 2019
“We have seen what we thought was unseeable.”
— Channel 4 News (@Channel4News) April 10, 2019
The leader of the team of scientists behind the first ever images of a black hole discusses their remarkable achievement. pic.twitter.com/VNmm57gDvr
No comments:
Post a Comment