What's new

The black hole photo you've seen everywhere is thanks to this MIT grad's algorithm

If you can't see it, then how do you know it is there Retarded indian? :omghaha: How can you conclusively "know" what is the black-hole phenomenon when you cannot see it, when you cannot collect reliable data on it, when you cannot determine the frequencies bandwidths around it? :omghaha:

Do you listen and believe in every dic.k head scientist then good luck to you but don't bring your jack.shit here and spray it ones who refuses to accept nonsense.


Can you see the smell of rose ?
Can you see the taste of water ?
Can you see the touch of kid?

I hope you know what black hole is, its called black hole because you cannot get anything out of it.
So if one can prove that we are not getting anyting out from the given location and followed by other postulates that defines properties of black hole, then you got the black hole. Obviously its limited to current knowledge of science.

It is easy to open your mouth like an illiterate but very hard to provide concrete proof.
Agree, you dearly need to understand and apply the same.
 
The black hole photo you've seen everywhere is thanks to this MIT grad's algorithm

the-black-hole-photo-youve-seen-everywhere-is-thanks-to-this_ncuc.910.jpg

BY JOHNNY LIEU5 HOURS, 42 MINUTES
You've seen the very first photo of a black hole, now meet the person who helped to pull it together.


lg.php



MIT grad student Katie Bouman was behind the algorithm which helped to image the black hole, residing in the middle of galaxy M87, some 55 million light years away.

SEE ALSO: What's actually going on in that cryptic black hole photo?

A photo of Bouman in disbelief, which was originally posted on her Facebook page, was shared on the MIT CSAIL Twitter account. The caption suggests it was taken at the very moment the image was processed.

View image on Twitter


MIT CSAIL

✔@MIT_CSAIL

https://twitter.com/MIT_CSAIL/status/1116020858282180609

Here's the moment when the first black hole image was processed, from the eyes of researcher Katie Bouman. #EHTBlackHole #BlackHoleDay #BlackHole (v/@dfbarajas)


37.1K

7:51 PM - Apr 10, 2019

12.1K people are talking about this

Twitter Ads info and privacy


Back in 2016, Bouman developed the algorithm which was used to create the groundbreaking image, working with a team of researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the MIT Haystack Observatory.

The sheer distance of the black hole from Earth meant it would be akin to photographing an orange on the Moon's surface. To get an image of the black hole, you'd need a large telescope. An Earth-sized one, in fact.

"To image something this small means that we would need a telescope with a 10,000-kilometer diameter, which is not practical, because the diameter of the Earth is not even 13,000 kilometers," Bouman explained at the time.

So, to achieve this, a global network of eight ground-based telescopes called the Event Horizon Telescope project banded together to create one large telescope, designed to collect light data from the black hole.

Bouman comprehensively described the process in a 2017 TED Talk.


As the project's website explains, the light data can tell researchers about the structure of the black hole, but there is still missing data which stops them from creating a complete image.

Bouman's algorithm — CHIRP (or Continuous High-resolution Image Reconstruction using Patch priors) — uses the sparse data collected from telescopes to help choose and verify an image to help fill in the gaps.

"Even though we had predicted that if you had a black hole that would see this ring of light, we didn't know if we were going to get this ring of light," she told Nature.

"We could've just gotten a blob. Seeing that ring, and seeing a ring that has a size that is consistent with other measurements that had been done completely differently, I think seeing that ring of light and being able to see that ring exists is huge."

So, what's actually going on in the photo itself? We broke it down.
https://me.mashable.com/science/3975/the-black-hole-photo-youve-seen-everywhere-is-thanks-to-this
 
Can you see the smell of rose ?
Can you see the taste of water ?
Can you see the touch of kid?

I hope you know what black hole is, its called black hole because you cannot get anything out of it.
So if one can prove that we are not getting anyting out from the given location and followed by other postulates that defines properties of black hole, then you got the black hole. Obviously its limited to current knowledge of science.

I knew you would come up with a retarded reasoning like this one cause you are a non-analytical person with a big mouth. :lol:

Now listen - The flower scent is produced by special cells, and these cells are visible under a microscope!! Yes it is. The scents emitted are frequencies, and these frequencies can be measured. A supporting extract below.

Dr Dave Lawson, from the University of Bristol's School of Biological Sciences, said: “If you look at a flower with a microscope, you can often see that the cells that produce the flower's scent are arranged in patterns"

Same principle applies to Air where air molecules can be seen under a microscope. Molecules of each and every item present in this Universe vibrates and emits specific frequency. And this is why if Black Holes truly existed the way these scientists are theorizing, then there would have been ample pictorial and video evidence and NOT CGIs.
 
I knew you would come up with a retarded reasoning like this one cause you are a non-analytical person with a big mouth. :lol:

Now listen - The flower scent is produced by special cells, and these cells are visible under a microscope!! Yes it is. The scents emitted are frequencies, and these frequencies can be measured. A supporting extract below.

Dr Dave Lawson, from the University of Bristol's School of Biological Sciences, said: “If you look at a flower with a microscope, you can often see that the cells that produce the flower's scent are arranged in patterns"

Same principle applies to Air where air molecules can be seen under a microscope. Molecules of each and every item present in this Universe vibrates and emits specific frequency. And this is why if Black Holes truly existed the way these scientists are theorizing, then there would have been ample pictorial and video evidence and NOT CGIs.

I knew you will come up with nonsense..
So did you got photo of smell or you got photo of special cells and the frequencies analysing the patterns of which you can define photographical representation of smell?
I would surely like see the photo of ROSE Smell, can you give me a photo? When I see the photo i should feel the Rose Smell.

If you can understand that then you can understand what black holes are else sorry you need to go to school and learn basics of physics and somewhat chemistry.
 
Watch live in about 2 hrs as Israeli craft attempts moon landing

 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom