Groups | Search | Server Info | Keyboard shortcuts | Login | Register [http] [https] [nntp] [nntps]
Groups > sci.physics.relativity > #585249 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2022-05-12 20:20 -0700 |
| Last post | 2022-05-15 06:24 -0700 |
| Articles | 20 on this page of 59 — 13 participants |
Back to article view | Back to sci.physics.relativity
BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 20:20 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paul Alsing <pnalsing@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 20:45 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 21:25 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 22:09 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Maciej Wozniak <maluwozniak@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 22:26 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2022-05-14 07:32 +0200
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 23:13 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2022-05-14 13:54 -0500
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <PointedEars@web.de> - 2022-05-18 01:01 +0200
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 16:46 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2022-05-15 08:12 +0200
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-12 22:14 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-12 22:25 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-13 12:04 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-13 17:44 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 18:06 -0700
Crank Richard Hertz goes off the deep end "Dono." <eggy20011951@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 19:35 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-15 00:48 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-15 10:39 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-16 09:35 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-16 10:58 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-16 11:37 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Maciej Wozniak <maluwozniak@gmail.com> - 2022-05-16 22:59 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 09:26 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-17 09:58 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Maciej Wozniak <maluwozniak@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 10:08 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-17 10:17 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 10:44 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-17 11:00 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> - 2022-05-16 20:03 -0500
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-17 11:27 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Clutterfreak <clutterfreakincarnate@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 15:02 -0500
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 13:41 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-17 14:38 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 14:52 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-17 18:36 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 20:27 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-18 11:09 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-18 12:05 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-18 14:40 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-18 14:59 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-19 23:34 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, "Ross A. Finlayson" <ross.finlayson@gmail.com> - 2022-05-19 22:50 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-13 07:12 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 09:06 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, patdolan <patdolan@comcast.net> - 2022-05-13 09:36 -0700
Crank Richard Hertz mental unraveling "Dono." <eggy20011951@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 09:44 -0700
Re: Crank Richard Hertz mental unraveling The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-13 10:30 -0700
Re: Crank Richard Hertz mental unraveling Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-13 12:04 -0700
Re: Crank Richard Hertz mental unraveling The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2022-05-13 12:31 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-13 12:19 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Prokaryotic Capase Homolog <prokaryotic.caspase.homolog@gmail.com> - 2022-05-14 03:37 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-14 11:45 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-14 12:00 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-14 13:06 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, patdolan <patdolan@comcast.net> - 2022-05-14 13:23 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-14 14:24 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> - 2022-05-14 22:10 -0700
Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Paparios <mrios@ing.puc.cl> - 2022-05-15 06:24 -0700
Page 1 of 3 [1] 2 3 Next page →
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 20:20 -0700 |
| Subject | BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, |
| Message-ID | <118bbfb8-2b89-4087-86b9-66cbeef3cb6fn@googlegroups.com> |
FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. ******************************************* https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,” as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. Main points of the "multiple press conferences": 1) The images show a dark central “shadow” surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.” 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,” which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last five years. 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) European Southern Observatory Institute of Advanced Studies Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie National Astronomical Observatory of Japan National Science Foundation ****************************************** DISCLAIMER: The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized” VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizon”, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of the equations of GR. Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap.
[toc] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Paul Alsing <pnalsing@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 20:45 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <23bccfea-6a9f-49fb-9bb4-bd184af666dan@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585249 |
On Thursday, May 12, 2022 at 8:20:51 PM UTC-7, Richard Hertz wrote: > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > ******************************************* > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way... Actually, it is known as Sagittarius A* (pronounced as A-star)... as any knowledgeable amateur astronomer would know... it has been studied in detail for decades now and the science is pretty well accepted by the scientific community... and no one anywhere gives a fuck about what your opinion might be... – “invisible, compact and very massive,” as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow” surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.” > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,” which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > five years. > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > European Southern Observatory > Institute of Advanced Studies > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > National Science Foundation > > > ****************************************** > DISCLAIMER: > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! Exactly what is not "real" about radio wavelengths? You are clearly ignorant concerning the subject matter... > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized” VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizon”, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. Obviously you are taking this out of context... > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > the equations of GR. > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. Just because *you* don't understand it does not mean that it isn't real...
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 21:25 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <d9827a0f-6deb-4fc1-bc43-de811107c538n@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585250 |
On Friday, May 13, 2022 at 12:45:04 AM UTC-3, Paul Alsing wrote: > On Thursday, May 12, 2022 at 8:20:51 PM UTC-7, Richard Hertz wrote: > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > ******************************************* > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way... > > Actually, it is known as Sagittarius A* (pronounced as A-star)... as any knowledgeable amateur astronomer would know... it has been studied in detail for decades now and the science is pretty well accepted by the scientific community... and no one anywhere gives a fuck about what your opinion might be... > – “invisible, compact and very massive,” as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow” surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.” > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,” which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > five years. > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > European Southern Observatory > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > National Science Foundation > > > > > > ****************************************** > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > Exactly what is not "real" about radio wavelengths? You are clearly ignorant concerning the subject matter... > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized” VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizon”, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > Obviously you are taking this out of context... > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > the equations of GR. > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > Just because *you* don't understand it does not mean that it isn't real... And you are such a fucking asshole that DO NOT UNDERSTAND that optical frequencies are 100,000 HIGHER than radio signals in the S band, between 3 and 30 Ghz. Nothing non-optical can provide A FUCKING PHOTOGRAPH, imbecile! https://www.iram-institute.org/EN/30-meter-telescope.php This is one of the RADIO-telescopes that operates in the network, by analyzing millimeter and submillimeter MICROWAVES. NOTE: The image was produced by a global research team called the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration, using observations from a worldwide network of RADIO telescopes. The individual telescopes involved in the EHT in April 2017, when the observations were conducted, were: the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX), the IRAM 30-meter Telescope, the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), the Large Millimeter Telescope Alfonso Serrano (LMT), the Submillimeter Array (SMA), the UArizona Submillimeter Telescope (SMT), the South Pole Telescope (SPT). It's just a fucking DECEPTION, but ignorant cretins like you are gullible enough to accept "smoke and mirrors" fed into your ASS! Worse yet, fucking imbecile: You can't understand the limitations of using array of radio-telescopes, instead of a SINGLE ANTENNA! An array is a group of several radio antennas observing together creating — in effect — a single telescope many miles across. As an example, an array of 27 radio-telescopes (Dish size: 25 meters) distributed in arms 11 miles long provide a resolution of 0.2 arcseconds to 0.04 arcseconds, BUT THEY LOSE THE ABILITY to resolve details of the target, as the signals captured by the arrays of antennae only provides spatially sampled signals of the target. It's like to observe something through a Swiss cheese, DO YOU UNDERSTAND? So, you can focus the array on more tiny spots than with a single dish, AT THE COST of losing INTERNAL DETAILS of the target. You only get spatially separated samples, which have to be COMPOSED TOGETHER by heavy post-processing. And regarding my expertise in this area, is 100 folds above your fucking amateur knowledge, physicist wannabe. Now, die inside due to the heat of your hate. Imbecile ignorant. The world is going backwards due to ignorant people like you, which are just A PRETENDER. Photographs of microwave signals, fucking retarded!
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 22:09 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <96a30923-1e47-4bc7-9041-092caf8c43b2n@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585251 |
For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Maciej Wozniak <maluwozniak@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 22:26 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <2659863e-8ba9-4ae5-b0e5-bc6afd09bd74n@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585253 |
On Friday, 13 May 2022 at 07:09:35 UTC+2, Richard Hertz wrote: > For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: > > > Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE So, relativistic morons are waving their arms and screaming "EVERYTHING IS SUPPORTING OUR BELOVED SHIT!!!!!". What's so special about it?
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-14 07:32 +0200 |
| Subject | Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, |
| Message-ID | <je8t6rFlr6cU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #585253 |
Am 13.05.2022 um 07:09 schrieb Richard Hertz: > For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: > > > Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE > > Didn't know, the Selenski is also an astrophysicist. I always thought, he is an actor, who played a main character in a soap opera as President of the Ukraine. TH
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-13 23:13 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <f324c233-288c-4fca-b0fa-5089dfe2916dn@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585301 |
On Saturday, May 14, 2022 at 2:32:15 AM UTC-3, Thomas Heger wrote: > Am 13.05.2022 um 07:09 schrieb Richard Hertz: > > For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: > > > > > > Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE > > > > > Didn't know, the Selenski is also an astrophysicist. > > I always thought, he is an actor, who played a main character in a soap > opera as President of the Ukraine. > > > TH Neither Einstein was a physicist/astronomer. Just a fucking hyper-hiped cretin with an undeserved worldwide fame, received by most heads of state and political top dogs in his 1921-1925 fund raising world tour. Previously, he was brought to the stardom by the cabal, which supported his deceiving pseudo-science since 1911, providing to him impressive assistance with teams of real scientists, whom actually developed the shit he had to sell. The parallels are impressive: How to make a cretin look good and virtuous overnight, worldwide. And the CULT about what he represents is still alive 100 years later. A good actor for being a fucking charlatan. In the same way, we are witnessing in real time how another actor, posing as president, is being iconized in the west as the real deal against the east. A replay of relativity vs. Newton-Maxwell worlds in front of us. Any attempt to downplay Zelinsky in the west is punished heavily. Same thing with Einstein. The stupidity of the people and the power of mind-controlling MSM is displayed 24x7 currently, and western dissident voices are suppressed one way or another. EXACTLY the same mechanism by which Einstein and relativity were inserted into the minds of 5 generations. And you, as everyone else, is buying the shit because you are not allowed to think differently. Try to say publicly that black holes and gravitational waves are a hoax, and tell me how does it work for you. Try to say publicly that Ukraine is a fascist shithole and Zelensky is a faggot puppet, managed by the cabal, and tell me what happens. As always, follow the money. There is much more, but I'm stopping here. The narratives are only updated to modern times. Politics, science, no difference. Power, money and herd control is what counts.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | whodat <whodaat@void.nowgre.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-14 13:54 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <jeac7uFb84U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #585302 |
For anyone who didn't understand the depth and breadth of self- deprecation what follows is an example of an ever so slightly more sophisticated version. I call this one "exposing one's insanity." In order to be convincing, there needs to be some substance to a criticism. So where is mr "ahahaha" when he's needed. Probably burned out on too much of a good thing. On 5/14/2022 1:13 AM, Richard Hertz wrote: > On Saturday, May 14, 2022 at 2:32:15 AM UTC-3, Thomas Heger wrote: >> Am 13.05.2022 um 07:09 schrieb Richard Hertz: >>> For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: >>> >>> >>> Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream >>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE >>> >>> >> Didn't know, the Selenski is also an astrophysicist. >> >> I always thought, he is an actor, who played a main character in a soap >> opera as President of the Ukraine. >> >> >> TH > > Neither Einstein was a physicist/astronomer. Just a fucking hyper-hiped cretin with an undeserved worldwide fame, > received by most heads of state and political top dogs in his 1921-1925 fund raising world tour. > > Previously, he was brought to the stardom by the cabal, which supported his deceiving pseudo-science since 1911, > providing to him impressive assistance with teams of real scientists, whom actually developed the shit he had to sell. > > The parallels are impressive: How to make a cretin look good and virtuous overnight, worldwide. > > And the CULT about what he represents is still alive 100 years later. A good actor for being a fucking charlatan. > > In the same way, we are witnessing in real time how another actor, posing as president, is being iconized in the west as > the real deal against the east. > > A replay of relativity vs. Newton-Maxwell worlds in front of us. > > Any attempt to downplay Zelinsky in the west is punished heavily. Same thing with Einstein. > > The stupidity of the people and the power of mind-controlling MSM is displayed 24x7 currently, and western dissident voices > are suppressed one way or another. > > EXACTLY the same mechanism by which Einstein and relativity were inserted into the minds of 5 generations. > > And you, as everyone else, is buying the shit because you are not allowed to think differently. > > Try to say publicly that black holes and gravitational waves are a hoax, and tell me how does it work for you. > > Try to say publicly that Ukraine is a fascist shithole and Zelensky is a faggot puppet, managed by the cabal, and tell me what happens. > > As always, follow the money. There is much more, but I'm stopping here. > > The narratives are only updated to modern times. Politics, science, no difference. Power, money and herd control is what counts. >
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <PointedEars@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-18 01:01 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <4413078.LvFx2qVVIh@PointedEars.de> |
| In reply to | #585327 |
whodat wrote: > For anyone who didn't understand the depth and breadth of self- > deprecation what follows is an example of an ever so slightly > more sophisticated version. > > I call this one "exposing one's insanity." Thanks for sharing. > On 5/14/2022 1:13 AM, Richard Hertz wrote: >> [his (self-)delusions] Amazing and disturbing how (self-)deluded a single individual can be. PointedEars -- I heard that entropy isn't what it used to be. (from: WolframAlpha)
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-17 16:46 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <ffbf5ed3-fc00-4814-beb0-173b18798b1bn@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585534 |
On Tuesday, May 17, 2022 at 8:01:24 PM UTC-3, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote: > whodat wrote: > > > For anyone who didn't understand the depth and breadth of self- > > deprecation what follows is an example of an ever so slightly > > more sophisticated version. > > > > I call this one "exposing one's insanity." > > Thanks for sharing. > > > On 5/14/2022 1:13 AM, Richard Hertz wrote: > >> [his (self-)delusions] > > Amazing and disturbing how (self-)deluded a single individual can be. > > > PointedEars > -- > I heard that entropy isn't what it used to be. > > (from: WolframAlpha) Bodkin, is that you? The time zone UTC-5 is the same. I expected that Dono would bite the bait. Bit, anyway, a fish is a fish.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-15 08:12 +0200 |
| Subject | Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, |
| Message-ID | <jebjuiF7ea0U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #585302 |
Am 14.05.2022 um 08:13 schrieb Richard Hertz: > On Saturday, May 14, 2022 at 2:32:15 AM UTC-3, Thomas Heger wrote: >> Am 13.05.2022 um 07:09 schrieb Richard Hertz: >>> For the lovers of CGI, disinformation and indoctrination: >>> >>> >>> Black Hole In The Milky Way Center Revealed! Million Wonderful People Live Stream >>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd6q8B7D8qE >>> >>> >> Didn't know, the Selenski is also an astrophysicist. >> >> I always thought, he is an actor, who played a main character in a soap >> opera as President of the Ukraine. >> >> >> TH > > Neither Einstein was a physicist/astronomer. Just a fucking hyper-hiped cretin with an undeserved worldwide fame, > received by most heads of state and political top dogs in his 1921-1925 fund raising world tour. > > Previously, he was brought to the stardom by the cabal, which supported his deceiving pseudo-science since 1911, > providing to him impressive assistance with teams of real scientists, whom actually developed the shit he had to sell. > > The parallels are impressive: How to make a cretin look good and virtuous overnight, worldwide. Szelenski looks like a truck driver for me or the man from the gas pump and has absolutely nothing, what I would associate with a president (even from the tiniest banana-republic). So, I thought, that the guy is a fake and certainly an actor. It surprised me very much, when I heard, that he is in fact an actor and played in fact the President of the Ukraine (in a soap opera!). I also thought, it would be exceptionally dangerous, if the president would walk alone over the streets of Kiev and give an interview while doing so. The reason: Ukraine is actually a large country, which once belongs to the Soviet Union and therefore heavily infiltrated with exKGB-agents. The former head of the former KGB is now president of Russia and attempts to kill Szelenski. So, a lot of enemies and a far too hostile environment for the President of the Ukraine, what would forbid to walk around on the street. Putin could easily send one of his agents with a sniper rifle or sent a cruise missile, a RPG or whatever. So, no real president would walk around alone on the main street of Kiev. Instead of a real video, the interview given seems to be a production similar to dystopian action movies, where they use green screen and CGI, to create the impression of someone walking on an empty street. That would fit to 'actor' and also to his political statements, but would reduce his credibility to that of other actors like -say- Bruce Willis. Now one of the astrophysicists in the video quoted above looks quite like Szelenski, hence I thought, it would be a good joke to ascribe that astrophysicist to Szelenski, too. Also the title '....super-massive black hole...' would also fit very well. > And the CULT about what he represents is still alive 100 years later. A good actor for being a fucking charlatan. > > In the same way, we are witnessing in real time how another actor, posing as president, is being iconized in the west as > the real deal against the east. We Germans have particularily bad experiences with wars against Russia, hence any kind of hostility in that direction is as popular as the black death in Germany. Germans like to make business and export cars and machinery and do not like wars with other countries, especially not with Russia. The reputation of the Ukraine is actually much lower than that of Russia, because that country is regarded as among the corruptest countries in the world. The Ukrainians are actually nice people in general, as long as you leave politics away. I personally knew a few Urkainians and had good experiences. Russians can be quite nasty, on the other hand, but most are nice people, too. Now we he a typical post-soviet trauma in that country, which leads to extreme nationalism, corruption and mafia-like structures. Most of the wealth created, even with that low productivity, went into private pockets. And now they apperently want to sell the entire country. So 'The West' saw its chance to gain grounds in the east, hence forced the Russians to invade. That is in a nutshell the political situation in the Ukraine. As a German I'm thinking about ways to reduce tensions and eliminate the threat of a war, what is certainly against other parties agendas. But peace is by far the better option and sooner or later we will have some sort of agreement with the Russians. ... TH
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 22:14 -0700 |
| Subject | Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, |
| Message-ID | <627DE937.763A@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585249 |
They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? Here is the sharp version: https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 Richard Hertz wrote: > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > ******************************************* > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > five years. > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > European Southern Observatory > Institute of Advanced Studies > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > National Science Foundation > > ****************************************** > DISCLAIMER: > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > the equations of GR. > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-12 22:25 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <fabec650-f8f6-44e7-8b4e-18a686f4091an@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585254 |
On Friday, May 13, 2022 at 2:14:12 AM UTC-3, The Starmaker wrote: > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > > Here is the sharp version: > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > ******************************************* > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,” as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow” surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.” > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,” which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > five years. > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > European Southern Observatory > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > National Science Foundation > > > > ****************************************** > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized” VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizon”, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > the equations of GR. > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > and challenge > the unchallengeable. Gases are spinning around the BH at almost the speed of light, they said. It causes that blobs of light turn around the BH several times per minute, they said. It was difficult to obtain an HD pic due to the above, they said. Also, we have to compose and doctor millions of pieces of data in the last 5 years, they said. And we had to check that every layer was fulfilling Schwarzschild-Hilbert equations, they said. Plus, we had to transpose microwave frequencies to an optical zone, 100,000 times higher in frequency, they said. How dare you question anything? We are the scientific elite. Shock, awe, absorb and obey, they said.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-13 12:04 -0700 |
| Subject | Re: BREAKING: First image of supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, |
| Message-ID | <627EABD7.4F0F@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585254 |
Now, all you have to do is take this 'sharpen' photo of the blurry black hole https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 and add around 160 percent blur (Gaussian Blur) and it looks the new fraudulent Black Hole photo in the news. There is a reason why men's vision gets blurry as they get older...it makes their wives look younger. all you see is a black hole. If you put a paper bag over you wife's head you need to put a hole in it. NASA needs a Black Hole. They remove the blue and green primary light colors.. all you left with is red and black. The Starmaker wrote: > > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > Here is the sharp version: > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > ******************************************* > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > five years. > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > European Southern Observatory > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > National Science Foundation > > > > ****************************************** > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > the equations of GR. > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > and challenge > the unchallengeable. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-13 17:44 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <627EFB69.3C84@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585284 |
Here is a video from sharp back to blurry https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1525273775251419136 https://youtu.be/0a7etYMLqPs i guess they are trying to hide the stuff that is inside a black hole... but i'm in the mood for a jelly doughnut! The Starmaker wrote: > > Now, all you have to do is take this 'sharpen' photo of the blurry black > hole > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > and add around 160 percent blur (Gaussian Blur) and it looks the new > fraudulent Black Hole photo in the news. > > There is a reason why men's vision gets blurry as they get older...it > makes their wives look younger. > > all you see is a black hole. > > If you put a paper bag over you wife's head you need to put a hole in > it. > > NASA needs a Black Hole. > > They remove the blue and green primary light colors.. > > all you left with is red and black. > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > > > Here is the sharp version: > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > > > ******************************************* > > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > > five years. > > > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > > > European Southern Observatory > > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > > National Science Foundation > > > > > > ****************************************** > > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > > the equations of GR. > > > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > > > > -- > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > and challenge > > the unchallengeable. > > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > and challenge > the unchallengeable. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Richard Hertz <hertz778@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-13 18:06 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <e0bd7da9-479b-4d14-834e-9def96260af4n@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585296 |
Translated from: https://www.infobae.com/?noredirect NOTE: 52 microarcseconds diameter, as exactly predicted by our god Einstein, at 20,000 far away from Earth. Not a single mention of Schwarzschild-Hilbert or similar metrics. Like photographing a donut on Moon's surface from Earth. PLUS 5 years of heavy post-processing of data, to make it FIT on our fucking equations (from only 8 hours of data gathering in 2017). ************************************** “After years of work, the international EHT collaboration revealed for the first time an image of the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*, located in the center of our galaxy. The central dark area, called the shadow of the black hole, is surrounded by a ring of glowing gas that occupies an angle in the sky of only 50 millionths of an arcsecond – as if we wanted to see a donut resting on the surface of the Moon. This resolution was achieved by forming a 'virtual telescope' the size of the Earth", explained Javier Badía from the Institute of Astronomy and Space Physics (IAFE). And he added: “The first image of a black hole, the one located in the galaxy M87, was obtained three years ago. Both observations add to the long list of confirmations of Einstein's Theory of General Relativity." "We were surprised by how well the size of the ring matched the predictions of Einstein's theory of general relativity," Geoffrey Bower, a scientist who led the studies at the Event Horizon Telescope, explained in a press release yesterday. or EHT in English). “These unprecedented observations have greatly improved our understanding of what is happening at the very center of our galaxy and thus offer new insights into how these giant black holes interact with their environment,” he added. The Spanish astrophysicist José Luis Gómez, one of those responsible for obtaining the first image of the black hole in our galaxy, explained to ABC the science behind the photograph: “Now we have images of two different black holes, the one found in the center of the galaxy M87, obtained in 2019, and that of Sagittarius A*, that of the center of our own galaxy, the Milky Way. And it turns out that they are very similar, which is exactly what we expected. Einstein's theory of relativity predicted that all black holes should look the same, a circular ring in which the only thing that changes is the size, which depends on the mass of the black hole. The bigger the black hole, the bigger the ring." “We knew precisely the mass of Sagittarius A*, four million solar masses, and its distance from Earth, so we knew it must be 52 microarcseconds. And that is exactly what we have observed. We have confirmed the theory of relativity with an accuracy of 10%. Regardless of size, two black holes look the same. It is a confirmation that has never been done until now: the theory of relativity does not vary on the scale. Black holes are the most extravagant objects one can imagine, time machines, a doorway out of our universe... but at the same time they are also the simplest," added the specialist. And he concluded: “This is the product of the work of more than 300 researchers spread all over the world. Obtaining the image of Sagittarius A* has been much more difficult than that of M87*. The main reason is that the image changes very quickly, from one minute to another. The plasma moves at the speed of light, but in Sagittarius A* the size it has to travel is much smaller than in M87*, so it goes around the entire black hole in just a few minutes. We used the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) for eight hours straight, a very long exposure time, which means the image can be blurry. It is like wanting to take a picture of a child who is not still. We have spent many years devising algorithms to prevent this. Although the image we have obtained is somewhat blurrier than that of M87*, we have still achieved it”. ************************************** The news is all over the MSM, including Russia Today (75% funded by the state). Another Zelinsky type PsyOp. Next step is to connect Zelinsky with Einstein in some way. They already share some common origins and geopolitical views (NWO).
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | "Dono." <eggy20011951@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-13 19:35 -0700 |
| Subject | Crank Richard Hertz goes off the deep end |
| Message-ID | <2322e4df-848f-46c9-8bf6-173ad7fb2505n@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #585298 |
On Friday, May 13, 2022 at 6:06:40 PM UTC-7, Richard Hertz wrote: > The news is all over the MSM, including Russia Today (75% funded by the state). Another Zelinsky type PsyOp. Next step is to > connect Zelinsky with Einstein in some way. They already share some common origins and geopolitical views (NWO). You are off your anti-psychotics meds once again, Dick.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-15 00:48 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <6280B062.106D@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585296 |
Now, here is the First black hole photo they showed last year: the blurry one https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/1 and my sharpen version one https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 Are they going to repeat the same process over and over again for the rest of the billion black holes out there??? I like my sharpen version better: https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 only problem is, there is no black hole... https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/3 they are just waves like an ocean wave... waddayoucallit, gravitional waves? space is wet but you're like a fish you don't feel the wet. The Starmaker wrote: > > Here is a video from sharp back to blurry > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1525273775251419136 > > https://youtu.be/0a7etYMLqPs > > i guess they are trying to hide the stuff that is inside a black hole... > > but i'm in the mood for a jelly doughnut! > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > Now, all you have to do is take this 'sharpen' photo of the blurry black > > hole > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > and add around 160 percent blur (Gaussian Blur) and it looks the new > > fraudulent Black Hole photo in the news. > > > > There is a reason why men's vision gets blurry as they get older...it > > makes their wives look younger. > > > > all you see is a black hole. > > > > If you put a paper bag over you wife's head you need to put a hole in > > it. > > > > NASA needs a Black Hole. > > > > They remove the blue and green primary light colors.. > > > > all you left with is red and black. > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > > > > > Here is the sharp version: > > > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > > > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > > > > > ******************************************* > > > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > > > > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > > > five years. > > > > > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > > > > > European Southern Observatory > > > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > > > National Science Foundation > > > > > > > > ****************************************** > > > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > > > the equations of GR. > > > > > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > > > > > > -- > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > > and challenge > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > -- > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > and challenge > > the unchallengeable. > > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > the unchallengeable. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-15 10:39 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <62813AD1.47A5@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585344 |
It appears to me that the mad scientists took their info to the ...'Art Dept.' and told them, "Gimme a Black Hole without looking like it was retouch in Photoshop!" And the 'art dept' genius blurred it so that it appears to be a black hole in the center. Actually, THEY BLURRED EVERYTHING!!!! Then they took it back to the mad scientists and he said... "WHAT THE FUCK IS DAT????" and the girl sez, "That's your black hole." and the mad scientists sez to her.. "IT LOOK LIKE YOUR FUCKING ASS YOU UGLY FUCKIN BITCH!!!!" of course she runs out of the room crying... (watch how real women scientists are treated in the scientific community) https://www.netflix.com/title/81303549 The Starmaker wrote: > > Now, here is the First black hole photo they showed last year: > > the blurry one > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/1 > > and my sharpen version one > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 > > Are they going to repeat the same process over and over again for the rest of the billion black holes out there??? > > I like my sharpen version better: > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 > > only problem is, there is no black hole... > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/3 > > they are just waves like an ocean wave... > > waddayoucallit, gravitional waves? > > space is wet > but > you're > like a fish > you don't feel > the wet. > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > Here is a video from sharp back to blurry > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1525273775251419136 > > > > https://youtu.be/0a7etYMLqPs > > > > i guess they are trying to hide the stuff that is inside a black hole... > > > > but i'm in the mood for a jelly doughnut! > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > Now, all you have to do is take this 'sharpen' photo of the blurry black > > > hole > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > > > and add around 160 percent blur (Gaussian Blur) and it looks the new > > > fraudulent Black Hole photo in the news. > > > > > > There is a reason why men's vision gets blurry as they get older...it > > > makes their wives look younger. > > > > > > all you see is a black hole. > > > > > > If you put a paper bag over you wife's head you need to put a hole in > > > it. > > > > > > NASA needs a Black Hole. > > > > > > They remove the blue and green primary light colors.. > > > > > > all you left with is red and black. > > > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > > > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > > > > > > > Here is the sharp version: > > > > > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > > > > > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > > > > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > > > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > > > > > > > ******************************************* > > > > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > > > > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > > > > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > > > > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > > > > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > > > > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > > > > > > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > > > > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > > > > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > > > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > > > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > > > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > > > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > > > > five years. > > > > > > > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > > > > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > > > > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > > > > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > > > > > > > European Southern Observatory > > > > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > > > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > > > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > > > > National Science Foundation > > > > > > > > > > ****************************************** > > > > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > > > > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > > > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > > > > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > > > > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > > > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > > > > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > > > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > > > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > > > > the equations of GR. > > > > > > > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > > > > > > > > -- > > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > > > and challenge > > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > > > -- > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > > and challenge > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > -- > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > > the unchallengeable. > > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > the unchallengeable. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2022-05-16 09:35 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <62827D38.53ED@ix.netcom.com> |
| In reply to | #585377 |
The Question is.. going by the images.. are there any Black Holes in our solar system? The Starmaker wrote: > > It appears to me that the mad scientists took > their info to the ...'Art Dept.' and told them, > "Gimme a Black Hole without looking like it was retouch > in Photoshop!" > > And the 'art dept' genius blurred it so that > it appears to be a black hole in the center. > > Actually, THEY BLURRED EVERYTHING!!!! > > Then they took it back to the > mad scientists and he said... > "WHAT THE FUCK IS DAT????" > > and the girl sez, "That's your black hole." > > and the mad scientists sez to her.. > > "IT LOOK LIKE YOUR FUCKING ASS YOU UGLY FUCKIN BITCH!!!!" > > of course she runs out of the room crying... > > (watch how real women scientists are treated in the scientific community) > > https://www.netflix.com/title/81303549 > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > Now, here is the First black hole photo they showed last year: > > > > the blurry one > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/1 > > > > and my sharpen version one > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 > > > > Are they going to repeat the same process over and over again for the rest of the billion black holes out there??? > > > > I like my sharpen version better: > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/2 > > > > only problem is, there is no black hole... > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1314447384261193728/photo/3 > > > > they are just waves like an ocean wave... > > > > waddayoucallit, gravitional waves? > > > > space is wet > > but > > you're > > like a fish > > you don't feel > > the wet. > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > Here is a video from sharp back to blurry > > > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1525273775251419136 > > > > > > https://youtu.be/0a7etYMLqPs > > > > > > i guess they are trying to hide the stuff that is inside a black hole... > > > > > > but i'm in the mood for a jelly doughnut! > > > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > > > Now, all you have to do is take this 'sharpen' photo of the blurry black > > > > hole > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > > > > > and add around 160 percent blur (Gaussian Blur) and it looks the new > > > > fraudulent Black Hole photo in the news. > > > > > > > > There is a reason why men's vision gets blurry as they get older...it > > > > makes their wives look younger. > > > > > > > > all you see is a black hole. > > > > > > > > If you put a paper bag over you wife's head you need to put a hole in > > > > it. > > > > > > > > NASA needs a Black Hole. > > > > > > > > They remove the blue and green primary light colors.. > > > > > > > > all you left with is red and black. > > > > > > > > The Starmaker wrote: > > > > > > > > > > They couldn't get it any more bluuryerrr? > > > > > > > > > > Here is the sharp version: > > > > > > > > > > https://twitter.com/Starmaker111/status/1524978633311256577/photo/1 > > > > > > > > > > Richard Hertz wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > FEEDING THE MIND OF PEOPLE WITH CRAP LIKE LIGO AND > > > > > > GRAVITATIONAL WAVES. This was announced today on Western media. > > > > > > > > > > > > ******************************************* > > > > > > https://eventhorizontelescope.org/blog/astronomers-reveal-first-image-black-hole-heart-our-galaxy > > > > > > > > > > > > Astronomers have confirmed the supermassive object at the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is indeed a black hole and captured the first-ever images of it using a worldwide network of telescopes. The images were unveiled on Thursday at *********** multiple press conferences by a team of researchers *********** known as the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration. > > > > > > > > > > > > Known as Sagittarius A, the object at the center of the Milky Way – “invisible, compact and very massive,†as described in a press release published by the European Southern Observatory – was long suspected to be a black hole. However, the images created through linking up a global network of radio telescopes provide direct proof of this hypothesis. > > > > > > > > > > > > Main points of the "multiple press conferences": > > > > > > > > > > > > 1) The images show a dark central “shadow†surrounded by a bright ring made up of glowing gasses, the light they produce bent by the black hole’s powerful gravity. The object has four million times the mass of the Sun, and is located 27,000 light years away from our planet. > > > > > > > > > > > > 2) Gases are orbiting the black hole at near the speed of light. EHT scientist Chi-kwan Chan likening the process to “trying to take a clear picture of a puppy quickly chasing its tail.†> > > > > > > > > > > > 3) The visuals were recorded by linking together eight radio observatories around the world to form what the researchers described as “a single ‘Earth-sized’ virtual telescope,†which was then used to observe Sagittarius A for hours at a time on multiple nights in 2017. > > > > > > > > > > > > 4) Powerful supercomputers and a team of more than 300 researchers from 80 institutes, previously imaged the black hole M87 at the center of the distant Messier 87 galaxy, publishing those findings in 2019. Sagittarius A is much closer, as well as over 1,000 times smaller and less massive. However, it was significantly more difficult to photograph, as it was equivalent to take a picture of a donut on the surface of the Moon from Earth. > > > > > > > > > > > > 5) Actually, due that gases rotates around the black hole several times per > > > > > > minute, a composite picture, averaged in time, was required plus the > > > > > > corrections due to comparisons with the solutions of general relativity > > > > > > equations, until a satisfactory picture was obtained. The blurred image is > > > > > > due to the multiple averages, result of heavy post-processing in the last > > > > > > five years. > > > > > > > > > > > > 6) Accompanying the photographic findings were six papers published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters covering various aspects of the discovery, from the imaging process to the morphology of black holes. > > > > > > > > > > > > 7) The main image was produced by averaging together thousands of images created using different computational methods — all of which accurately fit the EHT data. This averaged image retains features more commonly seen in the varied images, and suppresses features that appear infrequently. > > > > > > > > > > > > The images can also be clustered into four groups based on similar features. An averaged, representative image for each of the four clusters is shown in the bottom row. Three of the clusters show a ring structure but, with differently distributed brightness around the ring. The fourth cluster contains images that also fit the data but do not appear ring-like. > > > > > > > > > > > > Institutional Press Releases (in alphabetical order) > > > > > > > > > > > > European Southern Observatory > > > > > > Institute of Advanced Studies > > > > > > Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie > > > > > > National Astronomical Observatory of Japan > > > > > > National Science Foundation > > > > > > > > > > > > ****************************************** > > > > > > DISCLAIMER: > > > > > > > > > > > > The uber-doctore photograph IS NOT about OPTICAL wavelengths, but > > > > > > RADIO wavelengths, in the microwave region. So, IT'S NOT REAL! > > > > > > > > > > > > The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), an array which linked together eight existing RADIO observatories across the planet to form a single “Earth-sized†VIRTUAL telescope. The telescope is named after the “event horizonâ€, the boundary of the black hole beyond which no light can escape. > > > > > > > > > > > > The collected data, around 2017, was post-processed during 5 YEARS until > > > > > > the result MATCHED the database of possible solutions of general relativity. > > > > > > > > > > > > This is EXACTLY the same process used around LIGO for detecting gravitational > > > > > > waves. Any signal was compared with hundred of thousand of patterns > > > > > > stored in supercomputers, which are the result of different solutions of > > > > > > the equations of GR. > > > > > > > > > > > > Now, go and believe whatever you want. But you was warned about this crap. > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > > > > and challenge > > > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > > > > > -- > > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, > > > > and challenge > > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > > > -- > > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > > > the unchallengeable. > > > > -- > > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > > the unchallengeable. > > -- > The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, > to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge > the unchallengeable. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
Page 1 of 3 [1] 2 3 Next page →
Back to top | Article view | sci.physics.relativity
csiph-web