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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

First M87 Event Horizon Telescope Results. IV. Imaging the Central Supermassive Black Hole

Kazunori Akiyama, +254 more
- 10 Apr 2019 - 
- Vol. 875, Iss: 1, pp 1-52
TLDR
In this article, the first Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) images of M87 were presented, using observations from April 2017 at 1.3 mm wavelength, showing a prominent ring with a diameter of ~40 μas, consistent with the size and shape of the lensed photon orbit encircling the "shadow" of a supermassive black hole.
Abstract
We present the first Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) images of M87, using observations from April 2017 at 1.3 mm wavelength. These images show a prominent ring with a diameter of ~40 μas, consistent with the size and shape of the lensed photon orbit encircling the "shadow" of a supermassive black hole. The ring is persistent across four observing nights and shows enhanced brightness in the south. To assess the reliability of these results, we implemented a two-stage imaging procedure. In the first stage, four teams, each blind to the others' work, produced images of M87 using both an established method (CLEAN) and a newer technique (regularized maximum likelihood). This stage allowed us to avoid shared human bias and to assess common features among independent reconstructions. In the second stage, we reconstructed synthetic data from a large survey of imaging parameters and then compared the results with the corresponding ground truth images. This stage allowed us to select parameters objectively to use when reconstructing images of M87. Across all tests in both stages, the ring diameter and asymmetry remained stable, insensitive to the choice of imaging technique. We describe the EHT imaging procedures, the primary image features in M87, and the dependence of these features on imaging assumptions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Metrics and Motivations for Earth-Space VLBI: Time-Resolving Sgr A* with the Event Horizon Telescope

TL;DR: In this article, a very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) at frequencies above 230 GHz with Earth-diameter baselines gives spatial resolution finer than the "shadow" of the supermassive black hole at the Galactic Center, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*).
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frankenstein: protoplanetary disc brightness profile reconstruction at sub-beam resolution with a rapid Gaussian process

TL;DR: Frankenstein this paper reconstructs a disc's 1D radial brightness profile nonparametrically using a fast (<~1 min) Gaussian process, which avoids limitations of current methods that obtain the radial brightness profiles by either extracting it from the disc image via nonlinear deconvolution at the cost of reduced fit resolution, or by assumptions placed on the functional forms of disc structures to fit the visibilities parametrically.
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Shadows and photon spheres with spherical accretions in the four-dimensional Gauss-Bonnet black hole

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the shadow and photon spheres of the Gauss-Bonnet black hole with the static and infalling spherical accretions and find that the shadow is a signature of the spacetime geometry and it is hardly influenced by accretion in this case.
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Shadow, deflection angle and quasinormal modes of Born-Infeld charged black holes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the effect of the coupling constants, the electric charge and cosmological constant on the observed optical properties of the Born-Infeld (BI) nonlinear electrodynamics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling non-thermal emission from the jet-launching region of M 87 with adaptive mesh refinement

TL;DR: In this article, a relativistic magnetohydrodynamical (GRMHD) model of the accretion flow is constructed for the M 87 SED from radio up to NIR/optical frequencies using a thermal-relativistic Maxwell-Juttner distribution.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: Inverse square law for a uniformly bright sphere as discussed by the authors is used to define specific intensity and its moments, which is defined as the specific intensity or brightness of a sphere in terms of specific intensity.
Journal ArticleDOI

First M87 Event Horizon Telescope Results. I. The Shadow of the Supermassive Black Hole

Kazunori Akiyama, +406 more
TL;DR: In this article, the Event Horizon Telescope was used to reconstruct event-horizon-scale images of the supermassive black hole candidate in the center of the giant elliptical galaxy M87.
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