First Image of a Black Hole

2 Minutes Read Time

NASA's first image of a black hole. What looks like an orange eye with a black iris at its center sits alone on a black plane.
Image courtesy of NASA

What exists in the shadow of a thing
That casts no light? I wonder if it’s God
On the other side collecting data fallen
Past the horizon. Lonely in the center
Of the Milky Way, the ultimate introvert,
What does It know of us? If we are made
Of stardust, do we collapse into ourselves
On death, our souls an absolute density?

This photo draws me in for minutes, hours,
With its accretion disk the color of a campfire.
Scientists made the image by accumulation,
Frame on frame on frame until the form
Emerged from consensus. How would our lives look
If every day were stacked together? What ring
Of bright ejecta would encircle our darkness?
Imagine this is Judgment Day. The most
Approximate average of our being scanned by God
As we’re spaghettified in our passing through.

When stretched to the limit, will we be found trapped
Inside the monster of our own making,
Like Reinhardt in The Black Hole, subsumed by
His robot Maximillian, or ferried through
By a crystalline angel even Rilke wouldn’t fear,
To the new heaven of a habitable planet?

This one is dying. We endeavor deep
Into space, finding photons orbiting
The portal like adorers ringing Christ
Risen, information falling in like crowns
Thrown at his feet. What doesn’t tumble in,
Like ashes. I wish to use them to remake
The world. I’ve no idea how it will turn out.

Read more from Issue 22.1.

Sun icon Moon icon Search icon Menu icon User profile icon User profile icon Bookmark icon Play icon Share icon Email icon Facebook icon Twitter icon Instagram icon Bluesky icon CR Logo Footer CR Logo Topnav Caret Right icon Caret Left icon Close icon

You don't have credit card details available. You will be redirected to update payment method page. Click OK to continue.