When surrounded by a transparent emission region, black holes are expected to reveal a dark shadow caused by gravitational light bending and photon capture at the event horizon. To image and study this phenomenon, we have assembled the Event Horizon Telescope, a global very long baseline interferometry array observing at a wavelength of 1.3 mm. This allows us to reconstruct event-horizon-scale images of the supermassive black hole candidate in the center of the giant elliptical galaxy M87. We have resolved the central compact radio source as an asymmetric bright emission ring with a diameter of 42±3 μas, which is circular and encompasses a central depression in brightness with a flux ratio 10:1. The emission ring is recovered using different calibration and imaging schemes, with its diameter and width remaining stable over four different observations carried out in different days. Overall, the observed image is consistent with expectations for the shadow of a Kerr black hole as predicted by general relativity. The asymmetry in brightness in the ring can be explained in terms of relativistic beaming of the emission from a plasma rotating close to the speed of light around a black hole. We compare our images to an extensive library of ray-traced general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of black holes and derive a central mass of M=(6.5±0.7)×10 9 M e . Our radiowave observations thus provide powerful evidence for the presence of supermassive black holes in centers of galaxies and as the central engines of active galactic nuclei. They also present a new tool to explore gravity in its most extreme limit and on a mass scale that was so far not accessible.
We have simulated the formation of an X-ray cluster in a cold dark matter universe using 12 different codes. The codes span the range of numerical techniques and implementations currently in use, including SPH and grid methods with fixed, deformable or multilevel meshes. The goal of this comparison is to assess the reliability of cosmological gas dynamical simulations of clusters in the simplest astrophysically relevant case, that in which the gas is assumed to be non-radiative. We compare images of the cluster at different epochs, global properties such as mass, temperature and X-ray luminosity, and radial profiles of various dynamical and thermodynamical quantities. On the whole, the agreement among the various simulations is gratifying although a number of discrepancies exist. Agreement is best for properties of the dark matter and worst for the total X-ray luminosity. Even in this case, simulations that adequately resolve the core radius of the gas distribution predict total X-ray luminosities that agree to within a factor of two. Other quantities are reproduced to much higher accuracy. For example, the temperature and gas mass fraction within the virial radius agree to about 10%, and the ratio of specific kinetic to thermal energies of the gas agree to about 5%. Various factors contribute to the spread in calculated cluster properties, including differences in the internal timing of the simulations. Based on the overall consistency of results, we discuss a number of general properties of the cluster we have modelled.
We present the first large-scale radiative transfer simulations of cosmic reionization, in a simulation volume of (100 h −1 Mpc) 3 . This is more than a two orders of magnitude improvement over previous simulations. We achieve this by combining the results from extremely large, cosmological, N-body simulations with a new, fast and efficient code for 3D radiative transfer, C 2 -RAY, which we have recently developed. These simulations allow us to do the first numerical studies of the large-scale structure of reionization which at the same time, and crucially, properly take account of the dwarf galaxy ionizing sources which are primarily responsible for reionization. In our realization, reionization starts around z ∼ 21, and final overlap occurs by z ∼ 11. The resulting electron-scattering optical depth is in good agreement with the first-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) polarization data. We show that reionization clearly proceeded in an inside-out fashion, with the high-density regions being ionized earlier, on average, than the voids. Ionization histories of smaller-size (5-10 comoving Mpc) subregions exabit a large scatter about the mean and do not describe the global reionization history well. This is true even when these subregions are at the mean density of the universe, which shows that small-box simulations of reionization have little predictive power for the evolution of the mean ionized fraction. The minimum reliable volume size for such predictions is ∼30 Mpc. We derive the power spectra of the neutral, ionized and total gas density fields and show that there is a significant boost of the density fluctuations in both the neutral and the ionized components relative to the total at arcmin and larger scales. We find two populations of H II regions according to their size, numerous, mid-sized (∼10-Mpc) regions and a few, rare, very large regions tens of Mpc in size. Thus, local overlap on fairly large scales of tens of Mpc is reached by z ∼ 13, when our volume is only about 50 per cent ionized, and well before the global overlap. We derive the statistical distributions of the ionized fraction and ionized gas density at various scales and for the first time show that both distributions are clearly non-Gaussian. All these quantities are critical for predicting and interpreting the observational signals from reionization from a variety of observations like 21-cm emission, Lyα emitter statistics, Gunn-Peterson optical depth and small-scale cosmic microwave background secondary anisotropies due to patchy reionization.
We present measurements of the properties of the central radio source in M87 using Event Horizon Telescope data obtained during the 2017 campaign. We develop and fit geometric crescent models (asymmetric rings with interior brightness depressions) using two independent sampling algorithms that consider distinct representations of the visibility data. We show that the crescent family of models is statistically preferred over other comparably complex geometric models that we explore. We calibrate the geometric model parameters using general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic (GRMHD) models of the emission region and estimate physical properties of the source. We further fit images generated from GRMHD models directly to the data. We compare the derived emission region and black hole parameters from these analyses with those recovered from reconstructed images. There is a remarkable consistency among all methods and data sets. We find that >50% of the total flux at arcsecond scales comes from near the horizon, and that the emission is dramatically suppressed interior to this region by a factor >10, providing direct evidence of the predicted shadow of a black hole. Across all methods, we measure a crescent diameter of 42±3 μas and constrain its fractional width to be <0.5. Associating the crescent feature with the emission surrounding the black hole shadow, we infer an angular gravitational radius of GM/Dc 2 =3.8±0.4 μas. Folding in a distance measurement of -+ 16.8 Mpc 0.7 0.8 gives a black hole mass of = ´ | | M M 6.5 0.2 0.7 10 stat sys 9. This measurement from lensed emission near the event horizon is consistent with the presence of a central Kerr black hole, as predicted by the general theory of relativity.
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