Sheperd Doeleman: Inside the black hole image that made history
謝普 · 多勒曼: 創造歷史的黑洞影像
Sheperd Doeleman led the global team behind the Event Horizon Telescope that captured the historic, first-ever image of a black hole. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
thank you so much for coming.
非常謝謝你來訪。
才在溫哥華降落的吧。
literally two hours ago in Vancouver.
from Einstein's equation to a black hole?
從愛因斯坦的方程式走到黑洞的?
geometric theory of gravity
關於重力的幾何理論,
how to move around it.
要如何在它周圍移動。
into a small enough region
放入一個足夠小的區域中,
keeps even light inside.
the reason the Earth moves around the Sun
地球繞行太陽的原因,
is pulling the Earth as we think,
太陽在拉著地球,
the shape of space
sort of fall around the Sun.
how to move around the Sun.
puncture through space-time,
打穿了空間-時間,
light orbits the black hole.
光會繞著黑洞運轉。
is what's happening here.
畫面上的狀況就是如此。
of what we always thought,
用電腦模擬出來,
around the black hole.
(event horizon)。
what a black hole really looked like.
黑洞看起來是什麼樣子的。
like this in supercomputers,
已經是我們所能做到最好的了,
literally move around the black hole,
that's drawn to the black hole,
into a very small volume, so it heats up.
極小的體積中,溫度變會上升。
you embarked on this mission
one of these things.
it's 55 million light-years away.
它位于 5500 萬光年之外。
solar-mass black hole.
質量為 65 億太陽質量。
to really fathom, right?
compressed into a single point.
of the center of this galaxy.
中心的一些能量學。
because it's so far away,
因為太實在太遠了,
of getting an image of it,
that you need.
objects in the known universe.
黑洞是宇宙中最小的物體。
on whole galaxies.
有特別大的影響。
as large as the Earth,
和地球一樣大的望遠鏡。
that we're looking at
會放出大量無線電波。
all around the world,
with atomic clocks,
from this black hole,
together to make an image.
做出一張影像。
at the same time,
in a lot of different ways.
我們都需要很好的運氣。
to be lucky than good.
I like to think.
我傾向認為我們兩者兼備。
through intergalactic space,
where water vapor can absorb it,
大氣中的水汽可能會吸收它,
at that wavelength of light,
搭配那樣的光波波長,
55 million light-years away.
5500 萬光年之外的那個黑洞。
huge amounts of data.
捕捉極大量的資料。
from just one telescope.
收集到的一半資料吧。
of our team, Lindy Blackburn,
團隊成員林迪布萊克本,
Millimeter Telescope,
記錄下來的一半資料,
mountain in Mexico.
一萬五千英呎的高山上。
is about half a petabyte.
(500 000 000 000 000 位元)。
that we might understand,
lifetime selfie budget.
一輩子的預算量。
you couldn't send this over the internet.
不能透過網路來傳輸。
to try and analyze it.
來試圖分析這些資料。
coming out of this.
works that we used --
這種技術的運作方式——
and smashing it
in different places.
光線在鏡面上完美地反彈,
off the surface, which is perfect,
at the same time.
later in a supercomputer.
把資料完美地對應起來。
kind of an Earth-sized lens.
地球尺寸的鏡片。
is to bring the data back by plane.
用飛機把資料帶回來。
of a 747 filled with hard discs.
or a few months ago,
we're really looking at there.
is that last orbit of photons.
geometry laid bare.
愛因斯坦幾何學。
這個洞非常之深,
as I think we'll see soon,
在黑洞後面的光
on these parallel lines
the square root of 27
of fundamental constants.
when you think about it.
這是很不可思議的。
when I thought of black holes,
whirling around in that shape.
以那種形狀繞著轉。
more complicated than that.
because it's light being lensed around it.
因為拍攝到的是它周圍的光。
from behind it gets lensed,
是它背後的光被拍攝到,
around the entire orbit of the black hole.
繞著整個黑洞在轉。
swirling around the black hole,
all of these light rays
for where you and I are.
begin to come into shape.
over 100 years ago.
愛因斯坦就已經預測到了。
what we're actually looking at here.
我們看到的是什麼。
brighter than the rest?
比其他部分明亮?
is that the black hole is spinning.
moving towards us below
一些氣體會朝向我們移動,
has a higher pitch
汽笛聲的音高較高,
coming towards us than going away from us.
會比遠離我們時更高。
being boosted in our direction.
would fit well within that dark region.
of the event horizon.
to us from that place
jetting out of it,
directly in our direction.
it's still powerful,
它仍然非常強大,
of this black hole
to really see all the jet structure,
無法看到整個噴流的結構,
that are illuminating the space-time.
就是這些噴流的基部。
around the black hole.
whirling around that thing somehow,
以某種方式繞行那東西,
to actually go around it?
to be in that spaceship.
不計代價上那台太空船。
if I can get wonky for one moment --
讓我偏離中心一下——
是最內層的軌道,
matter can move around a black hole
可以在這個軌道上繞著黑洞移動。
between three days and about a month.
可能要三天到一個月的時間。
it's weirdly slow at one level.
在一個層面上,它慢得很奇怪。
if you were there.
你正在落入事相面。
of "spaghettification,"
is much stronger than on your head,
比你的頭還要強太多,
a spaghetti noodle.
right through that event horizon.
she ended up in Oz.
最後到了奧茲國。
if you fall into a black hole?
the central mystery of our age,
這個時代的重要謎題,
and the gravitational world come together.
和重力世界交集的地方。
all the forces become unified,
to compete with all the other forces.
足以和其他力量競爭。
in the ultimate invisibility cloak.
in our own galaxy.
有一個比較小的黑洞。
我們自己的美麗銀河系?
to our own beautiful galaxy?
there's another one,
你也在試著找到它。
我們已經取得它的資料。
and we've already taken data on it.
in the near future, I can't say when.
能有所成果,我不敢說何時。
but also a lot smaller,
to what we saw?
that the black hole in M87,
M87 的那個黑洞,
是 65 億太陽質量。
that it appears a certain size.
看起來是某個大小。
is a thousand times less massive,
在質量上小了一千倍,
angular size on the sky.
角度大小是相同的。
a nod to a remarkable group of people.
這群了不起的人致敬。
that this image has had.
讓我們感到驚嘆。
above the fold in all of these newspapers,
它會在所有這些報紙上,
have believed you, but it was.
但確實發生了。
and I hope it's inspiring to everyone.
我希望它也能激勵所有人。
this is just a small number of the team.
這些人只是團隊的一小部分。
you need a global team.
你就需要一個全球團隊。
of linking telescopes around the world
連結起來所用的技術
some of the issues that divide us.
會分裂我們的一些議題。
come together to do something like this.
聯手一起做像這樣的事。
for our whole team this week.
整個團隊都很有激勵作用。
and for coming here.
也謝謝你的來訪。
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sheperd Doeleman - AstrophysicistSheperd Doeleman led the global team behind the Event Horizon Telescope that captured the historic, first-ever image of a black hole.
Why you should listen
Sheperd Doeleman is the project director of the Event Horizon Telescope and an astrophysicist with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. His research focuses on problems in astrophysics that require ultra-high resolving power. His work employs the technique of very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI), synchronizing geographically distant radio dishes into an Earth-sized virtual telescope. In addition to his work at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and for the Event Horizon Telescope, Doeleman is a Harvard senior research fellow and a project coleader of Harvard's Black Hole Initiative.
Doeleman's research includes work at the McMurdo Station on the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica and as assistant director of the MIT Haystack Observatory. He is a Guggenheim Fellow and was the recipient of the DAAD German Academic Exchange grant for research at the Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie. He leads and coleads research programs supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory ALMA-NA Development Fund, the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, the MIT International Science & Technology Initiatives (MISTI), the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and the John Templeton Foundation. Doeleman received his BA from Reed College and completed a PhD in astrophysics at MIT.
Sheperd Doeleman | Speaker | TED.com