
The First Milky Way Black Hole Image Lets Scientists Test Physics
The first image of the behemoth at the center of our galaxy opens new avenues for understanding the nature of black holes

Seth Fletcher is chief features editor at Scientific American. His book Einstein's Shadow (Ecco, 2018) is about the Event Horizon Telescope and the quest to take the first picture of a black hole.

The first image of the behemoth at the center of our galaxy opens new avenues for understanding the nature of black holes

It took hundreds of researchers and many telescopes to capture an image of the black hole at the middle of our Milky Way.

It took hundreds of researchers and many telescopes to capture an image of the black hole at the middle of our Milky Way.

The historic image of Sagittarius A* is the culmination of a decades-long astronomical quest—and a crucial step toward a new understanding of black holes, gravity and spacetime...

Searching for reality in unreal times

Scientific American 's chief features editor Seth Fletcher talks about his book Einstein's Shadow, an account of the long effort to image a black hole that recently came to fruition...

After more than a decade of effort, a global network of radio telescopes revealed the first-ever picture of an enigmatic hole in spacetime

The Event Horizon Telescope’s historic quest to image the “shadow” of a supermassive black hole is off to an auspicious start

If we survive the election, naturally

Part science documentary, part meditation on the meaning of life, director Terrence Malik’s (“The Tree of Life,” “The Thin Red Line”) new IMAX movie “Voyage of Time” is hard to categorize...

The astrophysicist and author talks about her new book, Black Hole Blues and Other Songs from Outer Space

Scientific American editors Mark Fischetti, Dina Maron and Seth Fletcher talk about the info they picked up at the just-concluded annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Washington, D.C...

It could mark the birth of a new kind of astronomy

The Harvard physicist explains the collaboration's long-awaited research on the black-hole information paradox

The long list of unanswered questions about black holes contains one particularly surprising item: How do they eat? Unlike many of the riddles that black holes pose, this one seems so simple: What do you mean we don’t know how things fall into a black hole?...

Conductive polymer mesh could be a boon to brain research

The first theory proposed to explain the universe's strangest galaxies has had impressive staying power

During a historic European heat wave, 36 Nobel laureates signed a declaration on climate change—and tried to shout down the science-denying claims of one of their own

Nobelist Harold Varmus on the promise of a new generation of cancer treatments—and the big challenges that remain

Controversy aside, work on NASA’s next deep-space rocket continues unabated
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