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While they are difficult to see for the obvious reason that they give off no light, we now know that they exist because there are circumstances in which they can be located by their every 10,000 stars, which means that the Milky Way contains at least 100 million black holes. At the very center of the galaxy lurks the darth-vader rock star, the supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A aka Sgr A*.
Looming beyond the horizon of Sgr A*, if we assume Einstein’s theory of relativity that predicts what Big Bang, only in reverse.
This Chandra image of Sagittarius A* or Sgr A*, was made from the longest X-ray exposure of that region to date. In addition to Sgr A* more than two thousand other X-ray sources were detected in the region, making this one of the richest fields ever observed.
Evidence for such explosions was revealed in the image – huge lobes of 20 million-degree Centigrade gas (the red loops in the image at approximately the 2 o’clock and 7 o’clock positions) that extend over dozens of last ten thousand years.
Black holes are already well understood, we think, but we’ve only ever observed them at second hand – the behavior of orbiting objects or bent light rays. To actually view the shadow of a black hole, the cut-off point where light is swallowed and cannot escape, would be a massive advance – and only the beginning.
Detailed observation of the area around the Sag A* border would be a goldmine of information. The spin and rate of matter inflow into the central black hole will tell us about the Milky Way’s creation, as well as providing further extreme tests of general relativity. We could even see frame dragging, which sounds like a video game hardware issue but is actually something that could happen to reality – where a spinning black hole grabs hold of space and literally pulls reality around after it.