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Columnist and Space

What does it mean to “look” at a black hole?

General relativity teaches us that observing a black hole is all a question of perspective – and technique, says Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

By Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

16 October 2024

Simulation of a black hole

A simulation of a black hole

Hotaka Shiokawa/EHT

General relativity teaches us that reality is, in some sense, a matter of perspective. Consider how someone who is “falling” into a black hole sees something completely different to an observer trying to watch that someone cross the event horizon, a black hole’s edge.

The person actually making the transition beyond this point of no return won’t see anything unusual, although they will notice gravity is getting stronger and stronger. By contrast, the observer will find that no matter how long they watch, the person never seems to actually cross the event…

Article amended on 30 October 2024

We have clarified that gravitational time dilation means that time flows more slowly when gravity is stronger, for example near a black hole

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