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		| The Event Horizon Telescope: Observing Black Holes with Schwarzschild-Radius Resolution |  
		| Dr. Shep Doeleman |  
		| Thursday, Dec 8, 2011 at 8:00 PM |  
		
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	 | 	It is now almost certain that at the center of our Milky Way
 Galaxy lies a super massive black hole - 4 million times more massive
 than our Sun. Because of its proximity to Earth, this object, known as
 Sagittarius A*, presents astronomers with the best opportunity in the
 Universe to spatially resolve and image a black hole Event Horizon. To
 do this requires using Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), the
 technique whereby radio telescopes around the world are linked together
 in a Global phased array. Very short wavelength VLBI observations have
 now confirmed structure on ~4 Schwarzschild radius scales within SgrA*,
 and have revealed time variability in this source on the same spatial
 scales. For the much more massive (6 billion solar mass) black hole
 powering the relativistic jet in M87, similarly compact structures have
 been detected. I will describe the instrumentation efforts that enable
 these observations, discuss what current and future VLBI observations
 can tell us about these super-massive black holes, and describe plans
 for assembling a submm-VLBI Event Horizon Telescope.
 
  Speaker Bio
  
Dr. Shep Doeleman is a Principal Research Scientist at MIT and
 Assistant Director of the MIT Haystack Observatory in Westford, MA. He
 got a BA in Physics from Reed College in Portland, OR, then spent a year
 in Antarctica working on upper atmospheric and particle physics
 experiments. He got his PhD at MIT working on Very Long Baseline
 Interferometry (VLBI), and now uses this technique to resolve the
 emission near the event horizon of super massive black holes.
 
 
  
Please join us for a pre-meeting dinner discussion at Changsho, 1712 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA at 6:00pm before the meeting. |  
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