Black Hole Week 2024 Poster and Media

  • Released Monday, May 6, 2024

In this movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image LabVisual description: This minimalist movie-style poster is dominated by a red-orange background dotted with stars. The title, “On the Brink,” is in the upper-left corner. The subtitle at the lower left reads “Meet Me at the Event Horizon.” The NASA insignia is in the upper right corner. At the center, a large black circle represents a black hole. Surrounding it are white lines, which are a stylized depiction of the black hole’s accretion disk as it appears to a distant viewer. Foreground lines arc in front of the black hole, as we would expect. However, the lines for the far side of the disk are visible above and below the black hole, instead of being blocked by it. This is due to the black hole’s gravity, which warps space-time and redirects the light on its path to us. A pocket watch in the lower right appears to be melting toward the black hole, evoking a feeling of spaghettification, an effect that happens to objects that get too close to a black hole.

In this movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole.

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

Visual description: This minimalist movie-style poster is dominated by a red-orange background dotted with stars. The title, “On the Brink,” is in the upper-left corner. The subtitle at the lower left reads “Meet Me at the Event Horizon.” The NASA insignia is in the upper right corner. At the center, a large black circle represents a black hole. Surrounding it are white lines, which are a stylized depiction of the black hole’s accretion disk as it appears to a distant viewer. Foreground lines arc in front of the black hole, as we would expect. However, the lines for the far side of the disk are visible above and below the black hole, instead of being blocked by it. This is due to the black hole’s gravity, which warps space-time and redirects the light on its path to us. A pocket watch in the lower right appears to be melting toward the black hole, evoking a feeling of spaghettification, an effect that happens to objects that get too close to a black hole.

Black holes are among the most mysterious cosmic objects, much studied but not fully understood. They contain huge concentrations of matter packed into very tiny spaces. A black hole is so dense that gravity just beneath its surface, the event horizon, is so strong that nothing — not even light — can escape. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole.

In this movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The poster was released May 6 as part of Black Hole Week 2024.

The light from the hot disk of material around the black hole is distorted by the immense gravity. And time also gets weird near a black hole — it passes more slowly for an object nearer to the black hole than a faraway observer.

Download printable versions and digital wallpapers for all your devices!

In this movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image LabVisual description: This minimalist movie-style poster is dominated by a red-orange background dotted with stars. The title, “On the Brink,” is in the upper-left corner. The subtitle at the lower left reads “Meet Me at the Event Horizon.” The NASA insignia is in the upper right corner. At the center, a large black circle represents a black hole. Surrounding it are white lines, which are a stylized depiction of the black hole’s accretion disk as it appears to a distant viewer. Foreground lines arc in front of the black hole, as we would expect. However, the lines for the far side of the disk are visible above and below the black hole, instead of being blocked by it. This is due to the black hole’s gravity, which warps space-time and redirects the light on its path to us. A pocket watch in the lower right appears to be melting toward the black hole, evoking a feeling of spaghettification, an effect that happens to objects that get too close to a black hole.

In this movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole.

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

Visual description: This minimalist movie-style poster is dominated by a red-orange background dotted with stars. The title, “On the Brink,” is in the upper-left corner. The subtitle at the lower left reads “Meet Me at the Event Horizon.” The NASA insignia is in the upper right corner. At the center, a large black circle represents a black hole. Surrounding it are white lines, which are a stylized depiction of the black hole’s accretion disk as it appears to a distant viewer. Foreground lines arc in front of the black hole, as we would expect. However, the lines for the far side of the disk are visible above and below the black hole, instead of being blocked by it. This is due to the black hole’s gravity, which warps space-time and redirects the light on its path to us. A pocket watch in the lower right appears to be melting toward the black hole, evoking a feeling of spaghettification, an effect that happens to objects that get too close to a black hole.

Vertically-formated teaser video using poster design elements.

Music: "Sorceror's Dream" from Universal Production Music

Complete transcript available.

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

On the Brink Wallpaper In this wallpaper based on the movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole.Download the desktop version here.Download the smartphone version here.Download the square version here.Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab

On the Brink Wallpaper

In this wallpaper based on the movie-style poster, the viewer gets the feeling of being on a precipice, teetering just on the edge of a black hole’s event horizon. The event horizon isn’t a solid surface like Earth’s or even the Sun’s. It's the boundary where the black hole's escape velocity equals the speed of light, the speed limit of the universe. Once matter crosses the event horizon, it will never escape the black hole.

Download the desktop version here.

Download the smartphone version here.

Download the square version here.

Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab



Credits

Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. However, individual items should be credited as indicated above.

Release date

This page was originally published on Monday, May 6, 2024.
This page was last updated on Monday, April 29, 2024 at 11:55 AM EDT.


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