Shaw Prize awarded to Reinhard Genzel
Reinhard Genzel, director of the Max Planck Institute for
extraterrestrial Physics (MPE) in Garching, Germany,
has been awarded this year’s Shaw Prize for Astronomy for his outstanding contribution
in demonstrating that the Milky Way contains a supermassive
black hole at its centre. The Shaw Prize is awarded annually by the Shaw Prize
Foundation in Hong Kong in the Life Sciences,
Mathematical Sciences and Astronomy, each of the three prizes bearing a
monetary award of one million US dollars.
By
developing state-of-the-art astronomical instruments and carrying out a tour-de-force
programme of observing our Galactic Centre for many years at the highest possible angular resolution (in part aided
with the novel technique of adaptive optics), Reinhard
Genzel and his MPE team have made decisive
measurements that have proven the existence of a black hole with a mass a few
million times that of the sun in the centre of the Milky Way. The existence of
such a supermassive black hole was first proposed in
1969 by Donald Lynden-Bell and Martin Rees.
In 2002 an international team led by
Reinhard Genzel observed a
star that takes only 15 years to orbit the Galactic Centre, while it was moving
at a speed of nearly 30 million kilometres per hour and located only 17
light-hours away from the location of the black hole. These measurements
excluded all other explanations as to the nature of the mass concentration in
the Galactic Centre and proved the existence of a central black hole beyond any
reasonable doubt. The supermassive black hole in the
centre of the Milky Way thus now constitutes the most conclusive empirical
proof that the black holes predicted by Einstein’s General Relativity actually
exist.
It is now thought that supermassive black holes are present in the centres of
nearly all massive galaxies and that they play a fundamental role in the
formation and evolution of these galaxies. That is because the accretion of
matter onto black holes can release enormous amounts of energy which then
provides an important feedback onto the central galaxy. The most extreme of
these objects are the luminous quasars.
Reinhard Genzel is scientific member of the Max Planck Society and heads
the group for Infrared and Submillimetre Astronomy at
the MPE. In addition he holds the position of professor in the Physics
Department of the University of California in Berkeley,
USA, and is an honorary
professor at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich,
Germany.
This is the
fifth year that the Shaw Prize has been awarded. The presentation ceremony is
scheduled for Tuesday, September 9, 2008 in Hong Kong.
http://www.shawprize.org/en/index.html
Contact:
Dr. Mona Clerico
Press Officer
Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics
and Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone +49 89 30000-3980
Email: clerico@mpe.mpg.de
Prof. Dr. Reinhard Genzel
Max Planck
Institute for extraterrestrial Physics
Phone +49
89 30000-3280
Email: genzel@mpe.mpg.de