The term “black hole” conjures up images of a stellar object
from which nothing can escape. This is only true of small black holes, and
supermassive black holes, which are millions of times as massive as the Sun can
actually beam out energy from matter falling into it in the form of intense
radiation. Further, if the black hole is spinning, the radiation can beam into
galaxies that are millions of light years away and shape them. Now, a team of
researchers from the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics has discovered
magnetic fields on the event horizon — which is the surface surrounding the
black hole from beyond which light cannot escape — of such a supermassive black
hole, which they have published in the journal Science. It had been discovered
some time ago that a supermassive black hole exists at the centre of our galaxy
— the Milky Way. This black hole is now known as Sagittarius A-star.
Astronomers detected the magnetic field using the powerful Event Horizon
Telescope, which is a global array of radio telescopes that link together to
function as one giant unit. Geared for very high detail observations, the Event
Horizon Telescope will have a resolution of 15 arc-seconds. This is equivalent
to being able to see a golf ball on the moon, according to a release from the
Centre for Astrophysics. High resolution is needed as black holes are really
compact objects. Sagittarius A-star, for instance, is about four million times
as massive as the sun, yet its event horizon is only 8 million miles across.
Being located 25,000 light years away, this would measure only 10 micro-arc
seconds across. The interesting thing is that the intense gravity of
Sagittarius A-Star warps light and magnifies its event horizon so that it
appears larger — about 50 arc-seconds, which can be easily resolved by the
Event Horizon Telescope. As Sagittarius A-star spins away furiously, matter
encircles it in the form of an accretion disc. The team found magnetic fields
in some regions near the black hole which are highly disorderly, in the form of
loops and whorls, like spaghetti, whereas in other regions it is more orderly,
presumably the places where jets of radiation are emitted. The magnetic fields
were also seen to fluctuate at time scales of about 15 minutes.

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