Katie Bouman: How to take a picture of a black hole
Katie Bouman is part of an international team of astronomers that's creating the world's largest telescope to take the very first picture of a black hole. Full bio
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at a supermassive black hole.
gravitational pull
of what a black hole might look like.
his theory of general relativity.
a lot of evidence in support of it.
from this theory, black holes,
as to what a black hole might look like,
a picture of one before.
that that may soon change.
of a black hole in the next couple years.
to an international team of scientists,
the final picture.
a real picture of a black hole today,
into the effort involved
see through images and video.
to this exciting project.
the bright city lights tonight,
to see a stunning view
millions of stars,
of the spiraling Milky Way,
a cluster of stars right at the center.
with infrared telescopes,
for over 16 years.
that is the most spectacular.
an invisible object.
enough to cause this motion
anything that ventures too close --
to zoom in even further?
that, by definition, is impossible to see?
to zoom in at radio wavelengths,
lensing of hot plasma
on this backdrop of bright material,
the black hole's event horizon,
becomes so great
the size and shape of this ring,
wouldn't only be really cool,
that these equations hold
around the black hole.
is so far away from us,
incredibly small --
on the surface of the moon.
extremely difficult.
to a simple equation.
that we can possibly see.
that in order to see smaller and smaller,
bigger and bigger.
optical telescopes here on Earth,
to the resolution necessary
resolution images ever taken
over 1.5 million oranges.
on the surface of the moon
that by crunching the numbers,
that we would need a telescope
this Earth-sized telescope,
that distinctive ring of light
hole's event horizon.
all the detail we see
our first glimpse
around a black hole.
the size of the Earth is impossible.
you just might find
from around the world,
called the Event Horizon Telescope
the size of the Earth,
hole's event horizon.
to take its very first picture
network works together.
of atomic clocks,
of the sights freeze light
of terabytes of data.
right here in Massachusetts.
in the center of our galaxy,
Earth-sized telescope?
let's pretend we could build
like turning the Earth
together to make a picture.
we remove most of those mirrors
this information together,
the locations where we have telescopes.
of measurements to make a picture from.
at a few telescope locations,
other new measurements.
those mirrors change locations
different parts of the image.
fill in the missing gaps of the disco ball
the underlying black hole image.
everywhere on the globe --
and for that reason,
of possible images
with our telescope measurements.
what we think of as images than others.
the first image of a black hole
the most reasonable image
uses limited descriptions
their knowledge of face structure,
use our limited telescope data
looks like stuff in our universe.
we're able to piece together pictures
done using simulated data,
in the center of our galaxy.
reconstruction such as this give us hope
the first image of a black hole
the size of its ring.
about all the details of this algorithm,
to give you a brief idea
what our universe looks like,
and verify our results.
of possible images
our telescope measurements,
between them in some way.
to be the black hole image,
that's most likely.
were to appear on Facebook.
would post this noise image on the left,
would post a selfie
we'd see it on Facebook
compared to the selfie.
from the black hole,
we've never seen a black hole before.
black hole image,
about the structure of black holes?
from simulations we've done,
from "Interstellar,"
it could cause some serious problems.
if Einstein's theories didn't hold?
an accurate picture of what was going on.
too much into our algorithms,
what we expect to see.
we want to leave the option open
at the center of our galaxy.
very distinct features.
between black hole simulation images
every day here on Earth.
what images look like
of image's features too much.
of different kinds of images
affects our reconstructions.
a very similar-looking image,
are not biasing this picture that much.
giving the same description
from all around the world.
a very similar-looking face,
cultural biases on the drawings.
different image features
into their little image patches.
a little bit like pieces of a puzzle.
to piece together an image
very distinctive sets of puzzle pieces.
to reconstruct the image?
image simulation puzzle pieces.
a black hole to look like.
of black hole simulation images?
from everyday images,
with your own personal camera?
from all different sets of puzzle pieces,
image we get too much.
the same set of puzzle pieces,
from everyday images,
many different kinds of source images.
astronomical non-black hole objects,
the elephant in the center of our galaxy.
on the bottom look very similar
more confident in our algorithms.
of everyday photographs,
personal camera.
we've never seen before
together pictures we see all the time
trees, cats and dogs.
will make it possible for us
of a black hole,
those famous theories
imaging ideas like this working
without the amazing team of researchers
with no background in astrophysics,
through this unique collaboration
images of a black hole.
the Event Horizon Telescope
the interdisciplinary expertise
once thought impossible.
as mysterious to you as a black hole.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Katie Bouman - Imaging scientistKatie Bouman is part of an international team of astronomers that's creating the world's largest telescope to take the very first picture of a black hole.
Why you should listen
It is believed that the heart of the Milky Way hosts a four-million-solar-mass black hole feeding off a spinning disk of hot gas. An image of the shadow cast by the event horizon of the black hole could help to address a number of important scientific questions. For instance, does Einstein's theory of general relativity hold in extreme conditions? Unfortunately, the event horizon of this black hole appears so small in the sky that imaging it would require a single-dish radio telescope the size of the entire Earth. Although a single-dish telescope this large is unrealizable, by connecting disjoint radio telescopes located all around the globe, Katie Bouman and a team of astronomers are creating an Earth-sized computational telescope -- the Event Horizon Telescope -- that is capable of taking the very first up-close picture of a black hole.
Bouman is a PhD candidate in the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The focus of her research is on using emerging computational methods to push the boundaries of interdisciplinary imaging. By combining techniques from both astronomy and computer science, Bouman has been working on developing innovative ways to combine the information from the Event Horizon Telescope network to produce the first picture of a black hole. Her work on imaging for the Event Horizon Telescope has been featured on BBC, The Boston Globe, The Washington Post, Popular Science and NPR.
Katie Bouman | Speaker | TED.com