
Scientists Are Creeping Closer to Colorized Black Hole Images
Astronomers have figured out a way to observe the radio sky in multiple frequencies at once, allowing them to create full-color images of supermassive black holes. The breakthrough is built on a technique called frequency phase transfer, which lets scientists correct for atmospheric interference in real time across multiple radio bands. In plain English: They've basically figured out how to give radio telescopes a multi-color vision upgrade. Sara Issaoun, a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian, led the team, whose research was recently published in The Astronomical Journal.
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) stunned the world in 2019 with the first image of a black hole—M87*, followed in 2022 by Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at our galaxy's center. Now, scientists are planning a $300 million space-based successor mission, the Event Horizon Explorer, designed to sharpen those images tenfold and reveal the elusive photon rings that may confirm black hole spin and push the limits of general relativity. Meanwhile, some researchers have challenged aspects of the original Sgr A* image, proposing that its accretion disk may be more elongated than ring-like—an open question future observations may resolve.
Similar to how our eyes take in visible light's various wavelengths and interpret them as a range of colors, radio telescopes capture slices of invisible radio light in specific frequency bands. Stitch enough of those slices together and you get something like a color image—just not in the visible spectrum.
But until now, most radio telescopes could only observe one frequency band at a time. That's fine when astronomers' target is a distant galaxy that appears sedentary against the cosmos. But if scientists are trying to image a rapidly spinning black hole spewing relativistic jets, or wobbling from gravitational forces, the radio data can't be captured in a single image. The object simply moves so fast that multiple exposures can't be layered in a coherent way.
Enter frequency phase transfer. As reported in Universe Today, the team was able to track atmospheric distortions in their observations at one wavelength and sharpen the image in a different wavelength. (Correcting for atmospheric distortion is a regular problem for Earth-based observatories, but new technologies are allowing telescopes to overcome this longstanding hurdle in ground-based astronomy). The team's new black hole imaging method is still experimental, but the proof-of-concept means we're on the cusp of getting sharper, truer images of the most extreme objects in the universe.
Next-gen observatories like the EHT and Black Hole Explorer (BHEX) are already gearing up to use this method, bringing us one step closer to seeing a black hole in all its violent and vivid brilliance.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Entrepreneur
9 minutes ago
- Entrepreneur
This App Is the Financial Hack Every Entrepreneur Parent Needs
Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you'll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners. Kids who are taught about money during their childhood are three times more likely to earn an income of $75,000 or higher as adults, according to data from personal finance company Quicken. As a busy entrepreneur without the benefits typically available to large corporate employees, it's even more important to prepare for your children's future. Fortunately, there's now an app for that. FutureMoney Pro is an investing platform that helps you reach goals for your kids' future. Right now, you can secure a lifetime subscription for just $100 (reg. $580), plus a $100 bonus investment. Let this app help you invest for your children's future Parents lead by example, so your children will see you hard at work as a busy entrepreneur. If you want to set them up for success and inspire future entrepreneurship, let FutureMoney help them see how easy it can be to invest. This app was made with parents in mind, so you can plan ahead and start saving for your child's education, first home, or long-term goals. With FutureMoney, you can invest wiser with tax-advantaged tools such as Junior Roth IRAs and 529 plans so your money can grow smarter. The app also lets you invest with others — so parents, grandparents, and other family members can all contribute together and track the growth of their contributions. It simplifies the process so your children can start learning about saving and investing, too. FutureMoney was designed by fintech veterans, and this lifetime subscription gives you permanent access without annoying subscription fees. It offers one of the lowest fees available for a fully managed portfolio, just .25%, and gives you options like automated contributions that make saving for your children's future as easy as setting it and forgetting it. All funds are held at BNY Mellon, with up to $500,000 in SIPC protection. When you sign up now and fund the account with a qualifying contribution, you'll receive a $100 bonus, allowing your lifetime subscription to essentially pay for itself. Teach your children financial literary while setting them up for a bright future with FutureMoney Pro, now $100 for a lifetime subscription (reg. $580), with a $100 bonus investment. StackSocial prices subject to change.


CBS News
10 minutes ago
- CBS News
The "Loon Lady" on a mission to save Minnesota's state bird: "We need to do better"
It's peak summer on Minnesota's Gull Lake Chain. Boats are buzzing, jet skis slicing and loons are calling. "So it sounds like a territorial challenge that's starting," said Sheila Johnston, listening to loons in the distance. Johnston, known by her nickname "the Loon Lady," has made it her mission to protect loons. "I've heard people say, 'Well this is our lake.' No. This is their lake and we're sharing it with them," she said. It's a commitment that has been growing most of her life. Johnston grew up spending summers on Gull Lake. She and her husband now live there year round. "I love it here, it's our favorite place in the world." she said. The Johnstons' home is filled with reminders of her passion. Loon photographs and artwork can be seen on the walls. Outside near the shoreline, there's a large totem pole with a loon perched on top. "I think they just somehow stir our soul, and so I just feel really connected to them," she said. That connection began with a paddle and a camera. "I love kayaking and I love photography, so I just started combining the two," she said. For years, she quietly observed loons from the water, photographing them, getting to know them and even naming them. "As you get to know more about loons, they're just so complex," she said. Her work shifted from enthusiast to advocate nearly a decade ago, after a busy Fourth of July weekend when she found a dead loon chick in the water, killed by a boat strike. "I just don't think we take very good care of them," she said. "We need to do better." While loons face natural predators like eagles, snapping turtles and large fish, humans are their biggest danger. Boat strikes, lead poisoning from ingesting fishing tackle and fishing line entanglement are the main causes. Johnston raises awareness by talking to boaters and reminding them loons and their chicks are nearby. "Our slogan is watch ahead, slow down, go around," she said. She also hands out lead-free tackle to anglers. "Lead tackle is plain bad. And there's absolutely no reason that we shouldn't have restrictions on lead tackle," she said. Last fall, she started the Minnesota Loon Rescue, a volunteer group dedicated to rescuing, rehabbing and conserving the loon population. "I think we have rescued at least 10 loons this season that were boat strike injuries and fatalities," she said. So far this season, the rescue has also saved seven hooked loons, 18 sick and orphaned chicks and six loons in distress on land. "These lakes are like freeway traffic in the Twin Cities at rush hour, full speed, going through chick-rearing areas," she said. Her advocacy has helped bring caution buoys and signage to alert boaters in loon nesting areas. "I don't think I'll ever stop this mission," she said. "By changing our behavior to loon-safe boating, and loon-safe fishing, we can protect loons and future generations of loons." For Johnston, and all who treasure Minnesota's natural beauty, protecting loons means protecting our home.


Forbes
10 minutes ago
- Forbes
Apple iPhone 17 Air: All The Super-Slim iPhone Leaks
When Apple reveals the iPhone 17 series, it looks like one mainstay, the Plus version of the regular phone, will have been canceled and replaced with something completely different, as Monty Python used to say. This super-slim addition, nicknamed iPhone 17 Air, has raised the most excitement. Here's what we know so far. iPhone 17 Air Design Above all, it's very thin, perhaps as thin as 5.5mm thick from front to back, which is a lot less than the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max at 8.25mm, for instance. This thickness will mean it's even thinner than the recently released, and reportedly very popular Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge (5.8mm). It would also be the thinnest iPhone ever, though please note the camera bump would make the phone 9.5mm thick where the lenses sit. It will also look unlike any other iPhone from the back, thanks to just one camera but a horizontal camera panel stretching the width of the phone. Fewer cameras means more room for the one thing it will need the most: battery. It seems it will have a different look in other ways, too. It's possible that Apple will change the metal finish on the iPhone 17 Pro from titanium to aluminum, and reserve titanium for the iPhone 17 Air: the combination of stiffness and light weight could be a perfect match for a phone this thin. And colors will be different from the 17 and 17 Pro ranges, and rumors suggest that along with black there'll be a white finish that is different from the iPhone 17. Plus either one or two more shades: light gold and light blue are considered most likely. The display is likely to have 120Hz refresh rate. iPhone 17 Air Camera Since the main camera on the iPhone 16 is a 48-megapixel model, this is likely to be the same on the iPhone 17 Air. This resolution also allows Apple to describe it as two cameras in one: cropping in to the central 12 megapixels of the sensor creates a 2x zoom equivalent. The front camera could be upgraded from the current 12-megapixel resolution found on current iPhones. iPhone 17 Air Processor Apple is working on two processors: A19 for the iPhone 17 and A19 Pro for the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. For the Air, some reports say Apple will use the A19 Pro but with one fewer GPU core. iPhone 17 Battery This could be the phone's Achilles' heel. Rumors say it won't last as long as other iPhones so users will be relying on power efficiencies in the new processors plus new adaptive battery software in iOS 26.