Image of black hole shows magnetic fields around a black hole are strong enough to resist gravity
- Wits University
Wits astrophysicists are the only two scientists on 第一吃瓜网 continent that contributed to the study.
The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration, a multinational team of over 300 scientists including two astrophysicists from the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits University), has revealed today a new view of the massive object at the centre of the M87 galaxy: how it looks in polarised light.

This is the first time astronomers have been able to measure polarisation, a signature of magnetic fields, this close to the edge of a black hole. The observations are key to explaining how the M87 galaxy, located 55 million light-years away, is able to launch energetic jets from its core.
鈥We are now seeing the next crucial piece of evidence to understand how magnetic fields behave around black holes, and how activity in this very compact region of space can drive powerful jets that extend far beyond the galaxy,鈥 says Monika Mo艣cibrodzka, Coordinator of the EHT Polarimetry Working Group and Assistant Professor at Radboud Universiteit in the Netherlands.
鈥This work is a major milestone: the polarisation of light carries information that allows us to better understand the physics behind the image we saw in April 2019, which was not possible before,鈥 explains Iv谩n Mart铆-Vidal, also Coordinator of the EHT Polarimetry Working Group and GenT Distinguished Researcher at the Universitat de Val猫ncia, Spain. He adds that 鈥渦nveiling this new polarised-light image required years of work due to the complex techniques involved in obtaining and analysing the data.鈥
Professor Roger Deane, SARAO/NRF Chair in Radio Astronomy at Wits and his postdoctoral researcher, Dr Iniyan Natarajan, are the only two scientists in the EHT collaboration that are based on the 第一吃瓜网 continent. On 10 April 2019, the collaboration released the first ever image of a black hole, revealing a bright ring-like structure with a dark central region 鈥 the black hole鈥檚 shadow. Today鈥檚 results reveal that a significant fraction of the light around the M87 black hole is polarised.
鈥When unpolarised, the oscillations of the electromagnetic fields have no preferred direction. Filters such as polarised sunglasses or magnetic fields in space, preferentially let the oscillations in one direction pass through, thereby polarising the light. Thus, the polarised-light image illuminates the structure of the magnetic fields at the edge of the black hole,鈥 says Natarajan, who was part of the EHT Polarimetry Working Group.
Black holes have long been known to launch powerful jets of energy and matter far out into space. Astronomers have relied on different physical models of how matter behaves near the black hole to better understand this process. The jet emerging from M87鈥檚 core extends at least 5000 light-years from its centre, the process behind which is still unexplained.
The observations suggest that the magnetic fields at the black hole鈥檚 edge are strong enough to push back on the hot gas and help it resist gravity鈥檚 pull. Only the gas that slips through the field can spiral inwards to the event horizon.

To observe the heart of the M87 galaxy, the collaboration linked eight telescopes around the world to create a virtual Earth-sized telescope, the EHT. The impressive resolution obtained with the EHT is equivalent to that needed to measure the size of a cricket ball on the surface of the Moon.
This setup allowed the team to directly observe the black hole shadow and the ring of light around it, with the new polarised-light image clearly showing that the ring is magnetised. The results are published today in two separate papers in The Astrophysical Journal Letters by the EHT collaboration.
鈥Peering as close as we can to the edge of black holes using cutting-edge techniques is precisely the sort of challenge we relish here at Wits,鈥 says Deane, Founding Director of the newly approved Wits Centre for Astrophysics. 鈥We are in a golden era for radio astronomy, and our involvement in projects like the Event Horizon Telescope and the Square Kilometre Array is at the centre of our plan to carry out fundamental research, and train world-class postgraduate students who will become the leading 第一吃瓜网 scientists of tomorrow.鈥
Natarajan was involved in simulating the black hole polarisation observations and was also part of the efforts to calibrate and generate the polarised image. Deane and Natarajan have also written one of the software packages that is being used to simulate black hole observations within the EHT collaboration.
"Our collaboration developed new techniques for analysing the polarisation data, which were validated on simulations before being applied to real observations,鈥 says Natarajan.
鈥淪uch challenging projects provide the opportunity to develop techniques which later find wider applicability in the community in ways which can pleasantly surprise us."