Event-horizon silhouette
A central dark sphere marks the compact-object boundary scale. It is visually enlarged relative to the surrounding system so the scene can be studied on a screen.
Black-hole field guide
The central engine of a massive elliptical galaxy with a prominent relativistic jet.
Catalog identity
Observation basis
Horizon-scale ring imaged by very-long-baseline radio interferometry; jet observed across multiple wavelengths.
M87* is the best public benchmark for a resolved supermassive-black-hole shadow outside the Milky Way.
Simulation Layers
A central dark sphere marks the compact-object boundary scale. It is visually enlarged relative to the surrounding system so the scene can be studied on a screen.
The bright ring is a lensing-inspired visual layer that explains why near-horizon light can wrap around the compact object.
Rotating disk particles show hot gas losing angular momentum. Disk color and thickness vary by black-hole class.
Targets with active nuclei or microquasar behavior show collimated jet cones; quiet/dormant targets omit the jet layer.
The model compresses event-horizon, disk, binary, galaxy, and light-year scales into a readable study frame.
The object is also selectable from the 3D Space Lab deep-space focus list.
Physics explanation
Black holes are observed by their influence: gravity, accretion, jets, hot gas spectra, stellar motion, binary dynamics, and lensing. The visible dark center is not a surface. It is a one-way causal boundary surrounded by curved spacetime and, when fuel is present, rapidly orbiting plasma.
Review caution
Large event-horizon silhouette, asymmetric photon-ring glow, and a collimated jet emerging from the nuclear region.
The visualization is deliberately lightweight for public web performance. It is a physics-oriented diagram in 3D, not a general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamics simulation or a direct telescope image.
Mathematical model
Black-hole visuals use theoretical scaling equations for the event horizon, photon-ring marker, and optically thick accretion disk. They are educational WebGL approximations, not numerical general-relativistic ray-tracing renders.
The black silhouette is scaled from the Schwarzschild radius relation. Mass changes the horizon scale through G, M, and c, not through image tracing.
The annular disk brightness and color are assigned from the standard steady thin-disk radial profile, so inner rings are hotter and outer rings cool by equation.
Orbiting gas is represented as differentially rotating annuli and flow bands. The visual proof is that angular speed decreases with radius as Keplerian motion requires.
Verification standard: the rendered object must be reproducible from stated equations, catalog parameters, or explicit geometric transforms. Visual reference images may inform presentation only; they are not the source of orbital positions, field vectors, accretion-disk gradients, timing, or engineering layout.
Limitations: browser scenes may use bounded scale, compressed distances, simplified two-body dynamics, schematic transfer curves, or educational approximations where full numerical ephemerides, CFD, finite-element models, or general-relativistic ray tracing are outside the page scope. Those simplifications are part of the model contract, not hidden image-based construction.