It worked! They got it!
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I guess the website removed the post you referenced so the link failed. I did see the picture Thursday morning and it is remarkable they got it and from such a huge distance away.
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Got it! Thanks. Enjoyed the linked to article on "event horizons."
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How long they been trying for a picture?
Very cool. Glad they got it. |
That's actually a very good question, TB.
According to what I found (seemingly had to use the horrible Wikipedia), the project first goes back to 1993, when Heino Falcke started investigating the possibilities of linking world-wide radiotelecopes, and had its first data capture in 2006. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_Horizon_Telescope |
It would have to tie in with current cameras ability to capture it. Which I think would be before 1993.
My first camera was a Brownie. The pictures were grainy and blurry but I thought they were great. When you think of the pictures they take now, of the moon, of a bumble bee in flight, inside a womb to check on babies welfare, of a whale deep in the ocean.... its amazing. |
If you go to YouTube and search for Carl Sagan - Blue Dot, you can view a video made 10-years ago showing Voyager 1 leaving the solar system turning it's camera back to view the earth fading away as it travels away from our home planet.
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Wow, that's beautiful!!
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A family portrait of our solar system. :)
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