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AI inference attacks drain enterprise budgets, derail regulatory compliance and destroy new AI deployment ROI.
Scientists may have found a new way to detect some of the universe's most mysterious objects, primordial black holes (PBHs), ...
The Event Horizon Telescope—a planet-scale array of ground-based radio telescopes—has obtained the first image of a supermassive black hole and its shadow.
In computer simulations, black holes with MAD-like magnetic fields are particularly efficient at generating huge jets of charged particles, like the cosmic blowtorch that stretches out for ...
MAY 12, 2022 — Astronomers today unveiled the first-ever image of Sagittarius A*, the black hole that sits at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. This is only the second time in history that an image ...
This iterative process of modeling and observation is critical for unraveling the mysteries of black hole environment dynamics.” This new understanding is particularly significant in light of the ...
The Princeton team also carried out preliminary high-resolution simulations to test the credibility of their technique. For this, team members collected several thousand instantaneous images of ...
This first-ever image of Sagittarius A*—the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way—was released to the public in 2022. It depicts a ringlike "doughnut" of superheated gas ...
The Hubble Space Telescope has imaged a "200,000 light-year-long trail of newborn stars" that may have been left behind by a runaway supermassive black hole. Video Credit: Black Hole Animation ...
NASA's simulation is based on a supermassive black hole the same size as the one at the center of our galaxy: Sagittarius A*. Here's an image of what Sagittarius A* really looks like.
Though we can image black holes—the Event Horizon Telescope first observed one’s shadow in 2019, and followed that up with an image of the black hole at the center of our own galaxy in 2022 ...
The appearance of black hole M87* changes from one image to the next, taken a year apart. EHT published the April 11, 2017 observation two years later in 2019.