It took a 'virtual' telescope to actually picture a black hole | Science News for Students
The Event Horizon Telescope - First Ever Images of a Black Hole - Sheperd S. Doeleman
Working together as a “virtual telescope,” observatories around the world produce first direct images of a black hole | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
How Does the Event Horizon Telescope Work? - Sky & Telescope - Sky & Telescope
Locations of the participating telescopes of the Event Horizon... | Download Scientific Diagram
Astronomers Capture First Image of a Black Hole — Japanese researchers contribute to paradigm-shifting observations of the gargantuan black hole at the heart of distant galaxy Messier 87 | NAOJ: National Astronomical
Event Horizon Telescope - Astrophysics
Telescopes Unite in Unprecedented Observations of Famous Black Hole | NAOJ: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan - English
Locations of the EHT Telescopes | ESO
Astrophysicists capture first image of a black hole
Column - Taking the First Picture of a Black Hole [2] - What are the Event Horizon Telescope and the Global mm-VLBI Array? - ALMA
Astronomers Image Magnetic Fields at the Edge of M87's Black Hole | The Institute of Statistical Mathematics
Why the Event Horizon Telescope took so long to image a black hole | Astronomy.com
Event Horizon Telescope Reveals Turbulent Black Hole Evolution: Wobbling Shadow of the M87 Black Hole
EHT pinpoints dark heart of the nearest radio galaxy | EHT-Japan
Groundbreaking Result' Coming from Black-Hole Hunting Event Horizon Telescope Next Week | Space