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To: C210N

I’m familiar with the scientific theory and find it problematic.

I’m waiting for the actual photos to be released and not the artist’s rendition.

I understand it will be soon.


42 posted on 09/12/2019 4:49:23 PM PDT by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: tired&retired

I watched this video several days ago which presents the theory you stated. I am a skeptic.

https://youtu.be/zUyH3XhpLTo


43 posted on 09/12/2019 4:52:43 PM PDT by tired&retired (Blessings)
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To: tired&retired
I found this *very* interesting... check it out or browse thru if you have a moment (total 9 min):

How to Understand the Black Hole Image

Using my every day intuition I wondered: will we see the "shadow" of the black hole even if we're looking edge on at the accretion disk? The answer is yes because the black hole warps space-time, so even if we wouldn't normally be able to see the back of the accretion disk, we can in this case because its light is bent up and over the black hole. Similarly we can see light from the bottom of the back of the accretion disk because it's bent under the bottom of the black hole. Plus there are additional images from light that does a half turn around the black hole leading to the inner rings.

What about the black hole "shadow" itself? Well initially I thought it can't be an image of the event horizon because it's so much bigger (2.6 times bigger). But if you trace back the rays, you find that for every point in the shadow, there is a corresponding ray that traces back to the event horizon. So in fact from our one observing location, we see all sides of the event horizon simultaneously! In fact infinitely many of these images, accounting for the virtually infinite number of times a photon can orbit the black hole before falling in. The edge of the shadow is due to the photon sphere - the radius at which light goes around in closed orbits. If a light ray coming in at an oblique angle just skims the photon sphere and then travels on to our telescopes, that is the closest 'impact parameter' possible, and it occurs at sqrt(27)/2*r_s

44 posted on 09/12/2019 5:09:07 PM PDT by C210N (qui)
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