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Why this black hole photo is such a big deal

Vox | March 19, 2026



What it took to collect these 54-million-year-old photons from a supermassive black hole.

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This is an updated version of a video we published in 2016 about the Event Horizon Telescope, an international collaboration to image a black hole for the first time in human history.

On April 10, 2019, the team announced their results: They had successfully imaged the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy m87, which is nearly 54 million light-years away from us. They were able to achieve unprecedented resolution using very long baseline interferometry, which combines the observations of multiple radio telescopes across the globe.

The team wanted to find out whether Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity holds up in the extreme environment of black holes, and the results do, in fact, seem to be consistent with the predictions. In the future, we may see more and shaper images of black holes as the team targets smaller wavelengths of light and recruits more telescopes. Eventually, they may include an orbiting space telescope.

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Comments

This post currently has 37 comments.

  1. @Vox

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    hey, if you want to help us make more videos like this, I want to tell you about the Vox Video L—WAIT DON'T GO! just give me a second- At the end of this i'm going to share a great gif so standby. So the Video Lab is a membership program we set up so that viewers could support our work directly. If one of our videos has ever been worth the price of a mediocre sandwich to you, think about joining the Video Lab (wait just checked – you can't even get a $5 footlong at Subway anymore!). Being a member gives you access to behind-the-scenes videos and q&as, but most importantly, it really helps keep our channel and team sustainable and you can cancel anytime. here's where you can learn more and sign up: http://bit.ly/vox-video-membership

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  2. @curtlafond2731

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    This is wicked awesome! Congratulations, scientists!

    Imagine if our society could focus on brilliant scientific achievements like this instead of that horrible man.

  3. @micky1up

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    its not a big deal because its NOT a photo of a black hole ! at best its a computer generated image of the disc of material near a black hole because a black hole by its very definition can never be imaged

  4. @WillDaBeast1

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    You can’t say that the center of the black hole is the singularity because space time becomes so warped inside a black hole that a center has no meaning.

  5. @oliverlieberman

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    Wow so a picture of something we no nothing about very cool. I don’t really know how to process looking at something that I have no actual comprehension of. Something beyond understanding that bends light moves plants like toys. Seeing is believing but what should I believe when I don’t really know what I’m seeing.

  6. @phyllis9750

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    Really? Someone's so dense that they don't get how HUGE this is? Well DUH!!! I'm so excited by this. What a great time to be alive! A real black hole! Not just the physics on a black board, not just because Einstein said so, but a real IMAGE. Simply WOW!

  7. @karl2531

    March 19, 2026 at 12:37 am

    It's not a black hole, it's a huge asteroid or comet, or rock of some kind, with gravitational lensing, the orange stars behind it are magnified. The so called polarised light proof, actually shows the star behind moving as a separate entity having a tail of polarised light swirl connected to it, the swirl is not connected to the dark object. The dark object has no swirl about it. .. the dark object has random shapes on its sides like a large rock, and rotates about 2 planes of rotation, … There is no freedom of speech about this, I tried to ask the prize winner's for this at NASA and they were really rude and defensive and deleted my comment and entire account? I just said I'm a member of the public asking a honest question? Is it really a black hole? … It's a theory applied to the centre of our galaxy, based on the assumption that our galaxy rotates, it does not rotate, all the stars in the galactic arm travel at the same speed , indicating that the stars travel in a straight line, not rotary. The rotation is an illusion created by gravitational lensing causing gravitational mirroring. The galaxy only has one arm, the other is a reflection. There is no rotating vortices, and no centre to the galaxy, and therefore no rotating geometry upon which to place this black hole theory.

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