Earth is now 2,000 light-years near the galaxy’s supermassive black hole


20201126-Mizusawa-fig

Earth is slightly closer to the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy than we believe.

NAOJ

At the center of our galaxy, with a mass of our Sun about 4 million times, a A supermassive black hole named Sagittarius A *.

And great news! It turns out that scientists have discovered that we are closer to this giant black hole than we thought it would be 2,000 light years ago.

This does not mean that we are currently on a course colliding with a black hole. No, that’s just the result of a more accurate model of the galaxy based on new data.

For the past 15 years, the Japanese Radio Astronomy Project, VERA, has been collecting data. Using a technique called interferometry, VERA collected data from telescopes across Japan and combined them with data from other existing projects to create what is the most accurate map of the galaxy.

By pointing out the location and velocity of about 99 specific points in our galaxy, the VRA concludes that the supermassive black hole Sagittarius at the center of our galaxy is actually 4,800 light-years from Earth – about 3,000 light-years. -Closer than the year we believe earlier.

In addition, the new model calculates the Earth is moving faster than we think. The older models traveled the Earth at a speed of 220 kilometers (136 miles) per second, orbiting the center of the galaxy. In Veera’s new model Dell we have a speed of 227 kilometers (141 miles) per second.

Not bad!

Vera now hopes to increase the accuracy of its model by expanding its EAVN (East Asian VLBI network) and increasing the amount of data it collects by collecting data from large radio telescopes located in Japan, Korea and China.