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Space Science

A Recipe For Black Holes 13

hozzies writes: "This article at Space.com explains why black holes are "relatively nearby in cosmic terms... [but] don't seem to be eating much these days." This phenomenon has fascinated both scientists and the general public since it was first theorized. It explains a big chunk of the early universe—that is, if we can every prove they exist in the first place."
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A Recipe For Black Holes

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  • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@ y a hoo.com> on Monday June 11, 2001 @05:04AM (#161318) Homepage Journal
    And I thought this was going to be some kind of bake-your-own-Black-Hole article. Oh well!

    One of the problems with many studies of Black Holes is that nobody really knows what to look for. Despite many attempts, nobody has actually detected the only definitive proof of a Black Hole, Hawking Radiation.

    Many things in space emit X-Rays and Gamma Rays. Some are even "brighter" than Black Holes. There have even been a few events comparable in energy to the Big Bang itself. Also, the requirements for a Black Hole to form are somewhat extreme. You need to -start- with a star of greater mass than Chandrasaker Limit, which is about 3 solar masses. Following the death of the star, the gravitational attraction has to overwhelm everything else. ie: A star that gets ripped to shreds by a nearby massive object is unlikely to form a Black Hole.

    Hawking Radiation is radiation which results from virtual particles on, or just outside, the Event Horizon splitting up. This causes the Black Hole to "radiate". This "radiation" will, in theory, eventually cause Black Holes to evaporate. (This is a requirement of Quantum Mechanics, which prohibits any point in space from having no entropy.)

    Until this radiation is detected, most suspected Black Holes are just that - suspected, not determined. Now, there are a few objects that can reasonably be assumed to be Black Holes, simply because it is possible to show that there is a massive, dark object being orbited by a star that is being literally vaccuumed out of space. There isn't much room for doubt, in such cases.

    But they seem to be finding Black Holes everywhere. If you count all the "missing mass", Black Holes, and other alleged particles, you'll probably end up with 900% of the mass of the Universe. Ummm.... sorry to break it to you astronomer guys, but 100% is the limit. :)

  • The problem with spacetime extrapolations like black holes, wormholes, etc... is that the physicists who come up with those theories have no clue as to the actual physical mechanisms that give rise to the phenomenon we abstractly refer to as spacetime curvature. They just know that things fall at a certain rate near massive bodies and that clocks slow down in a gravitational field. From that limited understanding, they feel they are knowledgeable enough to extrapolate all sorts of cockamamie and unfalsifiable theories that are only fit for star-trek episodes.

    Kip "Wormhole" Thorne, Stephen Hawking & co claim that, according to their understanding of spacetime and relativity, it is possible to travel in time in principle. The amazing truth is that nothing can move in spacetime, by definition! Spacetime is frozen from the infinite past to the infinite future. So much so in fact that Sir Karl Popper compared Einstein's spacetime to "Parmenides' block universe [freethought-web.org]" in which nothing ever changes. This says a lot about their supposed undertanding of spacetime, IMO. Time travel is pure crackpottery. If you are gullible enough to swallow physics from people who treat time travel as a worthy subject [hawking.org.uk] of physics, I've got a bridge to sell you.

  • by Gaccm ( 80209 ) on Sunday June 10, 2001 @11:40PM (#161320)
    every [sic] prove they exist in the first place.

    For something to be provable in science it must be testable everywhere. Black holes, _by definition_ devour all light [information] that crosses the event horizon, and anything outside the event horizon isn't part of a black hole. Black hole can never be "proved" in the traditional sense, but that doesn't stop people from accepting that the overwhelming amount of circumstancial evidense, none of the info proves black holes, but the only thing that could do all of the proof is black hole [the proofs i'm talking about, are the light curvature around them, x-ray jet streams, and other random stuff like that.
  • by SIGFPE ( 97527 ) on Monday June 11, 2001 @03:28PM (#161321) Homepage
    I think you refute your own argument. If black holes "devour all light [information] that crosses the event horizon" (and that's certainly not a universally accepted definition - see the article in Scientific American, April 1997) then you can prove the existence of a black hole by finding a region of space which appears to devour all light. Trivial. Maybe I misunderstand you and you're making a deeper point. If so, please explain.
    --
  • For something to be provable in science it must be testable everywhere.

    Er, no.

    Is vulcanography not a science because you have to have a volcano to test it?
    _O_

  • Ingredients: One supermassive star.

    Instructions: Bring star to critical mass over a period of fifty thousand years. When the star begins to expand, add 200 billion billion tons of mass to augment its collapse.

    The star should collapse in upon itself within the next ten to twenty thousand years. Test for event horizon by placing a small mid-sequence star nearby and observing the accretion disk.

    Serves as many people as you can fit in it.

  • And lo, unto the heavens Al Gore said, "Let their be information."

    Neutrino mass at google. [google.com]

    On a side note I think I first read about it in scientific american. [sciam.com] As some of the dates will tell you this isn't a new development, so I don't know the issue. Maybe this [sciam.com] was it. A neutrino, or at least 1 flavor, tips the scales at a svelt .1 eV. I should figure out how many eV's I wiegh in at....or maybe I should have some more ice cream.

  • Minture black holes have odd properties. Thanks to virtual particles and the immutable laws of thermodynamics, black holes radiate energy. A breeze of virtually virtual (but not quite) particles. This is of course at the expense of their own mass. That's certainly not news, not even in the discussion of this article. However, the odd part is a small black hole is more likely to capture only one of the particles than is a larger black hole (which will likely capture both). So much so, in fact, that a black hole with the mass of a mountain and the size of a proton would make a very impressive explosive. (E=mc^2 where m is the mass of a mountain, tends to be a fairly substantial number) For comparison, a larger black hole, say of about 3 solar masses, might take 10^60 years to waste away. (I would check my guesstimations, but it turns out I'm fantastically lazy.) But aside from thowing off a pretty decent storm of random particles, a black hole, even with the measily mass of a mountain, would affect the matter around it. Sure on the small scale electrons wouldn't really care about the gravity, but on the larger scale that gravity could be pretty significant. Then black holes can have charge, so when it eats an electron, it then attracts a positively charge particle due to the charge etc. (I would also guess that a black hole would never acquire color charge as the other of the color charge pair would certainly be swallowed as well) But this doesn't really matter, because all the micro black holes have long since gasped their last. I for one don't see us making any black holes with any sort of real life span within the next few millenia. (I'm usually hesitent to prognosticate more than three millenia in advance.) Anyhoo I feel quite comfortable packing this in the same box with Schroedinger's Cat, Parallel Worlds, and other thought experiments. But who knows, with a quantum theory of gravity, they might suddenly become very interesting to think about, and worthy of dusting off.
  • by Kibo ( 256105 ) <naw#gmail,com> on Sunday June 10, 2001 @11:52PM (#161326) Homepage
    Black holes are pretty well accepted to exist, in a multitude of flavors I might add. There is a wealth of evidence from many sources that pretty well prove it. If the author means proof in the sence of walking up to the edge and tossing a star in, well grow up. Abstraction isn't a four letter word. I can't see an atom with the naked eye either, but their existance is quite certain from infered information. Sure, this information is pretty direct. But Rutherford's inferance of nuclei at the center of atoms in a sheet of gold is about the level of proof we've got for black holes. What are they like at the singularity? Well that's the realm of science yet to be invented. I think there's a place for scepticism, but this isn't it. Couldn't time be better spent disproving moon landings? For love of god, Hawking already paid off that bet. Black Holes are real, because you can't return a subscription to Penthouse. [penthouse.com]
  • by Kibo ( 256105 ) <naw#gmail,com> on Monday June 11, 2001 @06:00AM (#161327) Homepage
    One of the problems with many studies of Black Holes is that nobody really knows what to look for. Despite many attempts, nobody has actually detected the only definitive proof of a Black Hole, Hawking Radiation.

    Hawking Radiation is a very soft lowlevel buzz. If you had a black hole the size of a proton or so, it would make a tremendous explosion, but a black hold of any real size would make Hawking radiation all but undetectable. How ever if you have a totally dark object which occupies a small volume and has a mass of greater than 3 suns, you have a black hole.

    Many things in space emit X-Rays and Gamma Rays. Some are even "brighter" than Black Holes.

    Pardon me for stating the obvious, but almost everything in space is brighter than black holes, that's why they're called black holes. However, little is brighter than the accreation disks of super massive black holes, save the jets of plasma that they fling off. Many think that Quasars are ancient black holes in a period of youthful exhuberance tilted at a happy angle for our viewing enjoyment.

    You need to -start- with a star of greater mass than Chandrasaker Limit, which is about 3 solar masses.

    Umm the Chandrasekhar limit governs the formation of neutron stars and is 1.4 solar masses. And that is b the starting mass of the star, that is the required mass of the core left exposed by the supernova. Most stars will leave a white dwarf of glowing white and a beautiful nebula as testimate to their lives. But those who's core are greater than 1.4 solar masses degenerate into neutron stars instead. The mass of the core is so great that the electrons and protons are forced into a cohabitation, and can never break the lease. Thus a star only made of neutrons with a 1 km thick shell of iron for good measure.

    Until this radiation is detected, most suspected Black Holes are just that - suspected, not determined.

    You might be surprised to learn a great many cosmologists disagree with you. As does the esteemed Dr. Hawking. He bet a colleague a black hole (Cygnus X-1) was not really a black hole; the prize was a subscription to Penthouse. Hawking paid off, and that was in the 80's IIRC.

    But they seem to be finding Black Holes everywhere. If you count all the "missing mass", Black Holes, and other alleged particles, you'll probably end up with 900% of the mass of the Universe. Ummm.... sorry to break it to you astronomer guys, but 100% is the limit. :)

    The Universe is very very heavy. Finding many many more black holes, and kinds of black holes will not alter, in any meaningful way, the mass of the universe. We found something like 30% of the mass of the universe by discovering neutrinos have mass. They ain't much to look at, but you get enough of them together and they'll surprise you. Most current accountings of the universe have us as flat, which oddly enough it pretty well in agreement with what we observe.

    I would recomend a book called Black Holes by Pierre Luminte IIRC, or Stellar Interiors: physical principles, structure and evolution.. The later has little on black holes, but you'll learn about all sorts of neat stuff. But its a little technical too, in case thats not your cup of tea.

  • by TechnoGrl ( 322690 ) on Monday June 11, 2001 @03:13PM (#161328)
    Actually fairly recently both measurements of space-time dragging effectsas well as the accretion disk around several black holes. Plus the BH at the center of our galaxy has recently been pinpointed by observing several start orbiting around it waiting to be gobbled up. This pretty much makes them an observational reality

    You can find the articles here:

    http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/1997/blackholes .h tml

    and here:

    http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/blackhole/release.htm l

    and here:

    http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/astronomy/ ou r_black_hole_000920.html
  • Now, I think science is good, and I think teaching children is good, and I think this article is good for that, sure. Anyone really expecting it to be anything more than that, though, is just plain deluded. I mean, c'mon, you can't possibly write a serious article about the current thinking on black holes without using the words "accretion disk," "Cherenkov radiation [ucr.edu]," or "spacetime curvature."

    In short, there's nothing there that's not available in a children's book of 25 years ago. I could probably, with a little effort, even dig up the children's book I read all of that in about 25 years ago.

  • As long as massisive black holes are on the table, I was wondering about the other end of the scale.
    A long time ago I picked up a book that listed among some theoritical objects in space, the object that stood out in my mind was the idea of a miniture black hole. This would be a black hole that lost a majority all its mass do to energy given out by spin or some other force and flying through space, it would have nothing gobble up to help increase its size. It listed some intersting properties if I remember correctly, like the ability to fly through matter supposidly without effecting it. Its been a very long time since I read about them and I was wondering if anybody intersted in black holes has heard anything about them.
    Thanks!

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