Black Hole Close-Up M87 is a giant elliptical galaxy about 55 million light-years away. Accretion of matter onto its central massive black hole is thought to power its relativistic jet. To probe structures on scales similar to that of the black hole's event horizon, Doeleman et al. (p. 355 , published online 27 September) observed the relativistic jet in M87 at a wavelength of 1.3 mm using the Event Horizon Telescope, a special purpose, very-long-baseline interferometry array consisting of four radio telescopes located in Arizona, California, and Hawaii. The analysis suggests that the accretion disk that powers the jet orbits in the same direction as the spin of the black hole.
Sagittarius A*, the ∼ 4 × 10 6 M ⊙ black hole candidate at the Galactic Center, can be studied on Schwarzschild radius scales with (sub)millimeter wavelength Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI). We report on 1.3 mm wavelength observations of Sgr A* using a VLBI array consisting of the JCMT on Mauna Kea, the ARO/SMT on Mt. Graham in Arizona, and two telescopes of the CARMA array at Cedar Flat in California. Both Sgr A* and the quasar calibrator 1924−292 were observed over three consecutive nights, and both sources were clearly detected on all baselines. For the first time, we are able to extract 1.3 mm VLBI interferometer phase information on Sgr A* through measurement of closure phase on the triangle of baselines. On the third night of observing, the correlated flux density of Sgr A* on all VLBI baselines increased relative to the first two nights, providing strong evidence for time-variable change on scales of a few Schwarzschild radii. These results suggest that future VLBI observations with greater sensitivity and additional baselines will play a valuable role in determining the structure of emission near the event horizon of Sgr A*.
Near a black hole, differential rotation of a magnetized accretion disk is thought to produce an instability that amplifies weak magnetic fields, driving accretion and outflow. These magnetic fields would naturally give rise to the observed synchrotron emission in galaxy cores and to the formation of relativistic jets, but no observations to date have been able to resolve the expected horizonscale magnetic-field structure. We report interferometric observations at 1.3-millimeter wavelength that spatially resolve the linearly polarized emission from the Galactic Center supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A*. We have found evidence for partially ordered fields near the event horizon, on scales of ∼6 Schwarzschild radii, and we have detected and localized the intra-hour variability associated with these fields.Sagittarius A* (Sgr A * ) emits most of its ∼10 36 erg/s luminosity at wavelengths just short of one millimeter, resulting in a distinctive "submillimeter bump" in its spectrum (1). A diversity of models attribute this emission to synchrotron radiation from a population of relativistic thermal electrons in the innermost accretion flow (2-4). Such emission is expected to be strongly linearly polarized, ∼70% in the optically thin limit for a highly ordered magnetic field configuration (5), with its direction tracing the underlying magnetic field. At 1.3-mm wavelength, models of magnetized accretion flows predict linear polarization fractions > ∼ 30% (6-9), yet connected-element interferometers measure only a 5−10% polarization fraction for Sgr A * (10, 11), typical for galaxy cores (12). However, the highest resolutions of these instruments, ∼0.1−1 , are insufficient to resolve the millimeter emission region, and linear polarization is not detected from Sgr A * at the longer wavelengths where facility verylong-baseline interferometry (VLBI) instruments offer higher resolution (13). Thus, these low polarization fractions could indicate any combination of low intrinsic polarization, depolarization from Faraday rotation or opacity, disordered magnetic fields within the turbulent emitting 2 plasma, or ordered magnetic fields with unresolved structure leading to a low beam-averaged polarization. The higher polarization seen during some near-infrared flares may support the last possibility (14, 15), but the origin and nature of these flares is poorly understood, and they may probe a different emitting electron population than is responsible for the energetically dominant submillimeter emission.To definitively study this environment, we are assembling the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), a global VLBI array operating at 1.3-mm wavelength. Initial studies with the EHT have spatially resolved the ∼40 microarcsecond (µas) emission region of Sgr A * (16, 17), suggesting the potential for polarimetric VLBI with the EHT to resolve its magnetic field structure. On longer baselines,m mixes information about the spatial distribution of polarization with information about the strength and direction of polarization and must be in...
In 2017 April, the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observed the near-horizon region around the supermassive black hole at the core of the M87 galaxy. These 1.3 mm wavelength observations revealed a compact asymmetric ring-like source morphology. This structure originates from synchrotron emission produced by relativistic plasma located in the immediate vicinity of the black hole. Here we present the corresponding linear-polarimetric EHT images of the center of M87. We find that only a part of the ring is significantly polarized. The resolved fractional linear polarization has a maximum located in the southwest part of the ring, where it rises to the level of ∼15%. The polarization position angles are arranged in a nearly azimuthal pattern. We perform quantitative measurements of relevant polarimetric properties of the compact emission and find evidence for the temporal evolution of the polarized source structure over one week of EHT observations. The details of the polarimetric data reduction and calibration methodology are provided. We carry out the data analysis using multiple independent imaging and modeling techniques, each of which is validated against a suite of synthetic data sets. The gross polarimetric structure and its apparent evolution with time are insensitive to the method used to reconstruct the image. These polarimetric images carry information about the structure of the magnetic fields responsible for the synchrotron emission. Their physical interpretation is discussed in an accompanying publication.
We present the first Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observations of Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the Galactic center source associated with a supermassive black hole. These observations were conducted in 2017 using a global interferometric array of eight telescopes operating at a wavelength of λ = 1.3 mm. The EHT data resolve a compact emission region with intrahour variability. A variety of imaging and modeling analyses all support an image that is dominated by a bright, thick ring with a diameter of 51.8 ± 2.3 μas (68% credible interval). The ring has modest azimuthal brightness asymmetry and a comparatively dim interior. Using a large suite of numerical simulations, we demonstrate that the EHT images of Sgr A* are consistent with the expected appearance of a Kerr black hole with mass ∼4 × 106 M ⊙, which is inferred to exist at this location based on previous infrared observations of individual stellar orbits, as well as maser proper-motion studies. Our model comparisons disfavor scenarios where the black hole is viewed at high inclination (i > 50°), as well as nonspinning black holes and those with retrograde accretion disks. Our results provide direct evidence for the presence of a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, and for the first time we connect the predictions from dynamical measurements of stellar orbits on scales of 103–105 gravitational radii to event-horizon-scale images and variability. Furthermore, a comparison with the EHT results for the supermassive black hole M87* shows consistency with the predictions of general relativity spanning over three orders of magnitude in central mass.
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