TL;DR
This paper introduces techniques for reconstructing time-evolving images from interferometric data, enabling the study of rapid variability in astronomical sources like the Galactic Center black hole.
Contribution
It develops novel methods for dynamical imaging that handle intra-hour variability, improving upon traditional static imaging assumptions in VLBI.
Findings
Successfully reconstructed simulated black hole images with variability
Demonstrated feasibility on real M87 data
Applicable to Event Horizon Telescope observations of Sgr A*
Abstract
By linking widely separated radio dishes, the technique of very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) can greatly enhance angular resolution in radio astronomy. However, at any given moment, a VLBI array only sparsely samples the information necessary to form an image. Conventional imaging techniques partially overcome this limitation by making the assumption that the observed cosmic source structure does not evolve over the duration of an observation, which enables VLBI networks to accumulate information as the Earth rotates and changes the projected array geometry. Although this assumption is appropriate for nearly all VLBI, it is almost certainly violated for submillimeter observations of the Galactic Center supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), which has a gravitational timescale of only ~20 seconds and exhibits intra-hour variability. To address this challenge, we develop…
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