• mommykink
    link
    English
    302 months ago

    When I was a young man, I became deeply fascinated with black holes. I’d lie in my bed at night and try to imagine what it would feel like to enter one.

    • peopleproblems
      link
      112 months ago

      Because we’re basically looking at it from the “top” of the accretion disk. That’s not exactly correct, but the way light and gravity mix the image isn’t perfectly uniform.

      The brightest edge of the picture is the matter heading toward us, where as the darker edge it’s heading away.

      The image you shared has a bit of artistic touch. It’s hard to visualize how a disk of matter spinning in one plane can emit light in the massively warped space around a black hole.

      • threelonmusketeers
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        Because we’re basically looking at it from the “top” of the accretion disk.

        I’m not sure which way M87 points, but for Saggitarius A*, shouldn’t we be seeing it pretty much edge on? Our solar system is in the plane of the Milky Way.

        • @Telodzrum
          link
          62 months ago

          The Solar System sits about 20.5 parsecs above the galactic plane, so not really edge on.

    • @Khanzarate
      link
      42 months ago

      Possible we’re looking at the top and the band is a disk around it. Dunno for sure.

  • @_lilith
    link
    13
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    I thought the thumbnail was nsfw blurred and I clicked it to see space lewds

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      52 months ago

      it’s a false color image

      it’s too tiny to take a picture of using a traditional telescope, so instead, they use multiple telescopes around the Earth, and piecemeal that data together. Which means they have to reconstruct the missing details (it’s not made up, it’s more like playing “connect the dots” with tons of math)

      the final image is a composite of 3 different grayscale images, taken at different wavelengths of light.

      The resulting black and white images are given different colors, then blended together (which is pretty similar to how cameras take images, they just map the grayscale images to colors we can see with our eyes)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      162 months ago

      I hate to break it to you, but every photograph you’ve ever seen is a simulated image.

      • @jas0n
        link
        6
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        Here’s a picture of me when I was older.