ESO — EHT scientists make highest-resolution observations yet from the surface of Earth
Tuesday 3 September 2024

The illustration shows Earth in 3D on the left, with red dots on it. Some of the dots are brightened up in a yellow glow. To the right, a distant active galaxy, which is so far away that it is viewed as a star-like point of light, is depicted, with concentric circles around it that take up the entire frame. Illustration of the highest-resolution detections ever made from the surface of Earth - image credit: ESO
ESO, 27th August 2024. The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT)
Collaboration has conducted test observations, using the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and other facilities, that
achieved the highest resolution ever obtained from the surface of Earth [1].
They managed this feat by detecting light from distant galaxies at a
frequency of around 345 GHz, equivalent to a wavelength of 0.87 mm. The
Collaboration estimates that in future they will be able to make black
hole images that are 50% more detailed than was possible before,
bringing the region immediately outside the boundary of nearby
supermassive black holes into sharper focus. They will also be able to
image more black holes than they have done so far. The new detections,
part of a pilot experiment, were published today in The Astronomical
Journal. The EHT Collaboration released images of M87*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of the M87 galaxy, in 2019, and of Sgr A*, the black hole at the heart of our Milky Way galaxy, in 2022.
These images were obtained by linking together multiple radio
observatories across the planet, using a technique called very long
baseline interferometry (VLBI), to form a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual
telescope. To get higher-resolution images, astronomers
typically rely on bigger telescopes — or a larger separation between
observatories working as part of an interferometer. But since the EHT
was already the size of Earth, increasing the resolution of their
ground-based observations called for a different approach. Another way
to increase the resolution of a telescope is to observe light of a
shorter wavelength — and that’s what the EHT Collaboration has now done. “With
the EHT, we saw the first images of black holes using the 1.3-mm
wavelength observations, but the bright ring we saw, formed by light
bending in the black hole’s gravity, still looked blurry because we were
at the absolute limits of how sharp we could make the images,”
said the study's co-lead Alexander Raymond, previously a postdoctoral
scholar at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian
(CfA), and now at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, both in the United
States. “At 0.87 mm, our images will be sharper and more detailed,
which in turn will likely reveal new properties, both those that were
previously predicted and maybe some that weren’t.” To
show that they could make detections at 0.87 mm, the Collaboration
conducted test observations of distant, bright galaxies at this
wavelength [2].
Rather than using the full EHT array, they employed two smaller
subarrays, both of which included ALMA and the Atacama Pathfinder
EXperiment (APEX) in the Atacama Desert in Chile. The European Southern
Observatory (ESO) is a partner in ALMA and co-hosts and co-operates
APEX. Other facilities used include the IRAM 30-meter telescope in Spain
and the NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA) in France, as well
as the Greenland Telescope and the Submillimeter Array in Hawaiʻi. In
this pilot experiment, the Collaboration achieved observations with
detail as fine as 19 microarcseconds, meaning they observed at the
highest-ever resolution from the surface of Earth. They have not been
able to obtain images yet, though: while they made robust detections of
light from several distant galaxies, not enough antennas were used to be
able to accurately reconstruct an image from the data. This
technical test has opened up a new window to study black holes. With
the full array, the EHT could see details as small as 13
microarcseconds, equivalent to seeing a bottle cap on the Moon from
Earth. This means that, at 0.87 mm, they will be able to get images with
a resolution about 50% higher than that of previously released M87* and SgrA* [3]
1.3-mm images. In addition, there’s potential to observe more distant,
smaller and fainter black holes than the two the Collaboration has
imaged thus far. EHT Founding Director Sheperd “Shep” Doeleman, an astrophysicist at the CfA and study co-lead, says: “Looking
at changes in the surrounding gas at different wavelengths will help us
solve the mystery of how black holes attract and accrete matter, and
how they can launch powerful jets that stream over galactic distances.” This
is the first time that the VLBI technique has been successfully used at
the 0.87 mm wavelength. While the ability to observe the night sky at
0.87 mm existed before the new detections, using the VLBI technique at
this wavelength has always presented challenges that took time and
technological advances to overcome. For example, water vapour in the
atmosphere absorbs waves at 0.87 mm much more than it does at 1.3 mm,
making it more difficult for radio telescopes to receive signals from
black holes at the shorter wavelength. Combined with increasingly
pronounced atmospheric turbulence and noise buildup at shorter
wavelengths, and an inability to control global weather conditions
during atmospherically sensitive observations, progress to shorter
wavelengths for VLBI — especially those that cross the barrier into the
submillimetre regime — has been slow. But with these new detections,
that’s all changed. "These VLBI signal detections at
0.87 mm are groundbreaking since they open a new observing window for
the study of supermassive black holes", states Thomas Krichbaum, a
co-author of the study from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy
in Germany, an institution that operates the APEX telescope together
with ESO. He adds: "In the future, the combination of the IRAM
telescopes in Spain (IRAM-30m) and France (NOEMA) with ALMA and APEX
will enable imaging of even smaller and fainter emission than has been
possible thus far at two wavelengths, 1.3 mm and 0.87 mm,
simultaneously." Notes[1]
There have been astronomical observations with higher resolution, but
these were obtained by combining signals from telescopes on the ground
with a telescope in space: https://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/pressreleases/2022/2. The new observations released today are the highest-resolution ones ever obtained using only ground-based telescopes. [2]
To test their observations, the EHT Collaboration pointed the antennas
to very distant ‘active’ galaxies, which are powered by supermassive
black holes at their cores and are very bright. These types of sources
help to calibrate the observations before pointing the EHT to fainter
sources, like nearby black holes. [3] The GRAVITY instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope Interferometer has also obtained extremely detailed observations of Sgr A*,
pinpointing the exact location of the black hole and the material
orbiting it with an accuracy of a few tenths of microarcseconds.
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