Possible Hole in Black Holes 495
jd writes "Researchers have found what they believe may be a MECO (Magnetic, Eternally Collapsing Object) inside of a quasar. MECOs are rivals to black hole theory and involve plasmas that never reach the state of being a singularity. The most obvious differences between them are that MECOs have a magnetic field and do not have an event horizon. The problem lies in that the Universe cannot have both MECOs and black holes — it can only have one or the other. If this object truly is a MECO, then black holes do not exist. Anywhere. (Furthermore, this would require Professor Hawking to return a year's subscription to Private Eye and give Professor Thorne a year's subscription to Penthouse.) On the other hand, if this thing isn't a MECO, it's behaving very very oddly for a black hole."
Errr (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Errr (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Errr (Score:2)
You must be new here... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Errr (Score:3, Funny)
Why... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, if this thing really is an MECO then what are all of the things that we've thought were black holes?
Re:Why... (Score:5, Informative)
Probably MECOs.
Because it's 3 AM, and I don't have the energy to reproduce all the math, there's two main theories about super-massive objects (simplifying a lot).
One: Black holes. You've got an event horizon. Anything passes that point is gone forever. And they don't have magnetic fields. (remember, simplified massively)
Two: MECOs. No event horizon, instead the matter pulled in is spun for a while then ejected at near lightspeed. They do have magnetic fields.
Everything we know about black hole candidates falls into one of two sets of mutally exclusive equations (in large part to the magnetic field thing).
That this object appears to have a magnetic field supports one set of Einsteinian equations; the one that supports MECOs.
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
So if I understand correctly,
Black holes suck and swallow
Meco's suck, gargle and then spit it out
Dirty buggers the lot of them!
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
I think that's as far as we can take this. I hope so.
J.
Re:Why... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
Funny mods do not raise karma. If you are modded funny, then modded troll, or offtopic, then you will lose karma. I am very happy to see that more and more moderators are modding funny comments with other, karma-giving mods, not only because I think people deserve karma for making the world a funnier place, but especially because it helps to solve the problem that you can lose karma because people disagree as to whether you are funny or not. If the balance is 0, then the balance of karma should also be 0, but this is not how slashdot operates.
I urge everyone to use a karma-giving moderation instead of the funny moderation in all circumstances.
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
Furthermore "mecos" is Mexican slang for cum. I just wanted everyone to know that, so you can never again think about black holes and MECOs again without thinking about cum.
Dangerous (Score:2)
What may happen if a planet falls into MECO? There are who knows how many collapsed stars spinning chunks of matter at near lightspeed.
That's bad news for poor planet Earth, but good news for Armageddon [imdb.com]'s fans.
Re:Dangerous (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why... (Score:4, Interesting)
Though I have only known about MECOs for a few minutes, there's some things about black holes that never made sense to me.
Why the near-light speed ejecta from a spherical event horizon object. Where does all that lateral energy come from? A super strong magnetic field makes more sense as a method for ejecting material than matter at oblique angles to the ecliptic accelerated so much it collides (and 99% of the energy evens out due to the circular input field and the last 1% spitting the stuff out) with classical physics.
Instead, you get a south pole, and a north pole, and anything with any charge on each of those ends screaming in one direction or other.
It seems to me though that plasma would give off tons of light, and there ARE some cases where a BH was "speculated" to be present where it's pretty clear there isn't a light producing object there.
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why... (Score:5, Funny)
So you're saying Internet Explorer [youtube.com] is really a MECO?
Re:Why... (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, if all of a sudden my very smart next door neighbor told me the sky was purple, I'd have to give his account much more scruteny than normal, simply because I already have so much evidence that it's blue. I certaintly wouldn't elevate it much past "interesting" until I got a lot more information, and I'd certainly not discard blue until there was a great body of evidence.
TW
Re:Why... (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the two are mutually exclusive.
Black Holes are (or have, depending on how pedantic you want to be) singularities--that is their defining characteristic. No one has ever "seen" a singularity. What we see is indirect evidence for objects that are compact and too massive to be neutron stars. The theoretical upper limits on neutron star masses is quite strong, so we do not believe they are neutron stars.
When a fairly massive star collapses, it stops when the density gets high enough that repulsive core of the strong force dominates gravity. When a really massive object collapses, the strong force is not strong enough, and the collapse goes on unimpeded, which creates a defect in our coordinate system known as an event horizon.
The thing is, if there is something that could interfere with the collapse, then the collapse would not occur. Apparently MECO theory includs something that will do this. I have no idea if it is right or not, but if it is it provides a generic mechanism that will operate in all collapsed objects, so none of them will ever get to the singularity stage.
Proofs that Black Holes exist have always been a matter of elimination--it isn't a duck or a neutron star, ergo it must be a Black Hole. If there is another viable alternative, the proof goes by the wayside until more information is discovered.
Re:Why... (Score:3, Interesting)
Observations of the universe are more uncertain. Perhaps the researcher made a mistake (not saying they did) or engaged in fraud (not saying they did). The identification of this particular object as a MECO is one interpretation of telescopic evidence. Perhaps there are mechanisms compatible with black holes that explain the observed phenomena? Perhaps not. This is why theories don't live or die on single observations.
Re:Why... (Score:4, Insightful)
The maths our current model is based upon says they're mutually exclusive.
If we have observed an object that isn't a duck or a neutron star, or a meco, then it might still be a black hole and our current model may be incomplete.
i.e. if we prove observationally that mecos and black holes do exist, then that means our models/assumptions are wrong. or that what were observing is neither a meco nor a black hole but something else again...
Re:Why... (Score:5, Informative)
In English: once you go into one, you can never get back out if you believe that nothing can travel faster than light. If you CAN get out, the thing you started with was not a black hole!
Notice that for the concept of black hole to make sense, you do not need general relativity. You do need to believe that there is an ultimate speed limit, and then the black hole of any theory is the region you cannot escape from.
It is then a THEOREM of (classical) general relativity that such a region contains a singularity. If GR is corrected by some version of quantum gravity where there are no singularities, then this theory can still have black holes (regions of no escape).
Now this is a stricter sense in which black holes are talked about currently. The article mentions Hawking and Thorne's disagreement: is information carried off by Hawking radiaiton? The answer is no: if the information goes in then it cannot come out by (the strict) definition of what a black hole is. Technically, the argument about the information loss problem is whether or not black holes (as originally defined) exist at all!
However, this is an arguement purely at the level of sematics. There is very little observational difference between a real black hole [one that locks information up forever] and an information returning black hole [one that locks up and processes particles for a long period of time, but the end result of this process is re-emission as Hawking radiaiton]. Because the definition given above is one made for convience, most researchers in the field take a somewhat more pragmatic definition of a black hole.
The theory of MECOs seems to still be built on General Relativity. It claims that radiation increases to stop complete collapse. This does not preclude the existence of black holes! It just means that they are unlikely to form as the end result of astrophysical processes. However, there are situations where you can make black holes at very low temperatures, or ones that you can do in flat space (although these tend to be somewhat artificial).
The moral is
* MECOs are built on GR. If MECOs exist, then black holes are still solutions to GR
* The MECO advocates claim that this is a universal process for very hot and dense gas. We should not expect that black holes are a typical end of stellar product.
* MECOs may exist, but the process may not be universal (i.e. it may require particular thresholds of energy/pressure). This would allow a mix of black holes and MECOs.
* There may be no MECOs at all.
Personally I am dubious that MECOs exist at all. Pressure *can* support a star against collapse, but only to a certain extent in GR. After a while, the pressure required also acts as a stronger source of gravity and ends in a runaway reaction causing collapse. See this paper of mine for more details: http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0306038 [arxiv.org]
Re:Why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why... (Score:3, Insightful)
When the matter gets compressed to the point where one of these should form, one of two things should happen:
Re:Why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why... (Score:5, Interesting)
That black holes do not, in some way, posess a magnetic field seems to be a debatable subject.
One of the articles, http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn9050/ [newscientistspace.com], concerns the effiency of black holes and has a representative picture of jets moving away from the black hole. The captions reads:
No where does it state that a black hole is mutually exclusive of a magnetic field.Quasars are certainly misunderstood objects. They appear to be very far away. No one can really conclude what these distances are. Strictly basing an assumption on redshifts is not, for me, conclusive.
When a star forms, there is a point before "ignition" where there appears to be nothing. We can see these globules in many photographs of nebulae. According to theory, anywhere that you see what looks to be a perfect cirlce of black is a candidate for star formation.
Now, quasars are theorized to be precursors to galaxies. Why is it not possible that we are observing the same effect on a huge scale? The matter in the center of the quasar is simply reaching the critical point and in the end we have a galaxy with a core that is burning brightly and outer arms that would be the equivalent to the planets orbiting our sun?
For a good example of what this would look like, anyone can take a look at a picture of M104-the Sombrero Galaxy. Of course, there are many other spiral galaxies that one can observe, as well. The point is, the universe is very fractal in nature. We can compare the classical view of an atom to that of the solar system. Why can we not simply extend this to a view of a galaxy?
The event horizon is something that any object with mass has, as well. Of course, not on the same scale as a black hole, yet, come to close to the sun and you are doomed. A comet slammed in to Jupiter and disappeared. It will never be seen again. Our moon is stuck to the earth. Without adding energy to the system, the moon will always be a part of the system. The event orizon of a black hole is important because light cannot ever leave the system once inside this critical boundary. That does not mean that other systems possess no event horizon.
Also, there is a lot of evidence for black holes in binary stellar systems. I don't see how these MECO's offer an alternative eplanation for events that we observe vitually in our backyard. The quasars are too far away to readily observe and coem to any conclusion (if the distances are correct).
The reason that it is so "easy" to accept the concept of a black hole is simply the fact that as the diameter of a body decreases while retaining mass, there is no choice but to have the system collapse to a singularity--given enough mass. If there is not enough "critical" mass, we end up with neutron stars, dwarves, etc.... What happens inside the black hole is anyone's guess.
DavidQuestion... (Score:5, Interesting)
Just askin', and my apologies if this is a stoopid question.
Re:Question... (Score:3, Funny)
ARRRG!
The universe is so anoying, why won't it let us just go out an take a look?
Bloody speed of light crap.
monk.e.boy
Re:Question... (Score:2, Interesting)
P.S. Slashdot stories this complicated shouldn't be posted until later in the day, I need coffee!
Re:Question... (Score:5, Informative)
I am an astrophysicist but not a general relativity (GR) or cosmology person; take the following with a grain of salt. As far as I understand all solutions of GR equations involving singularities require some assumptions, since they need to take quantum effects into account and we do not have a theory of quantum gravity. So, we should be living in a very interesting universe if a few parameters about quantum gravity had such values and changed in such a way that MECOs were possible in the past and black holes are possible now. It is certainly possible, but if this happened I would suspect that there is a deeper reason for this.
Re:Why... (Score:2)
I'm in no way a physicist but by the looks of things something like this is happening.
When all the matter gets pulled together and it forms a MECO it gets ejected again at near the speed of light so there's no build up of matter beyond a certain point.
Because the matter doesn't build up there won't be enough matter for a black hole to form, so you can't have MECOs and Black holes together.
Re:Why... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why... (Score:3)
Re:Why... (Score:3, Interesting)
Space, as we know it, is a place in which matter and energy exist. Particles can be attributed a "position" within space relative to some other object in space, giving rise to the concept of "distance," which gives rise to all kinds of theories, relativity among them. In this model, we assume the existence of space and, ergo, the "position" of any given particle within space is an extrinsic property of that particle (i.e. assigned
space (Score:5, Interesting)
Unless... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Unless... (Score:3, Insightful)
And as these are both theoretical objects, there's no reason to assume they both exist.
Re:Unless... (Score:2, Insightful)
alternatively, mayby there are different cars, and different buildings.
You can have multiple outcomes of such a large event, depending on different starting conditions (weight of car and building material for the above analogy)
As we don't have a grand unified theory yet, we'll keep adjusting our disparate theories as we see new things.
I love science me, except the bits that hurt...
Flawed summary (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Unless... (Score:5, Insightful)
Blah blah blah. By that standard, no scientist in any field can "prove" anything -- you can't prove that it is not the case that the Universe was created five minutes ago by a deity that's having fun with his creations making them think that it's anywhere between six thousand and several billion years old; you can't prove that it is not the case that our eyes are completely deceiving us and the air is actually filled with floating jellyfish that want to eat our brains; you can't prove that it is not the case that "bacteria" and "viruses" are actually a clever Freemason conspiracy to hide from the rest of the world the truth that disease is caused by an imbalance of bodily humors
The truth is somewhere in the middle (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem that the grandparent pointed out is very real. While we need to assume that "the state of current knowledge" is sound and trustworthy to do any engineering it is fatal to make that assumption in science.
I had a friend who made a minor discovery while in undergrad, simply because he didn't fudge his data in a lab assignment. He got graded down for it, and decided to redo the experiment. When he got the same results, he started asking around and found out that quite a few of his classmates had also gotten the results he had, but written it off to "experimental error" since it didn't match the predicted outcome. He took this back to the professor, and challenged him to actually do the assignment himself. They wound up publishing a joint paper on it, but to me the most interesting realization was that, for all the years that assignment had been given, nobody else had caught the error in the accepted theory.
By all means, if you have to bet on the outcome of any particular situation, go with the current state of knowledge. But if you're asked if our current knowledge is correct in its entirety, bet heavily that it is not. And if observation doesn't match the theory, don't lock yourself into the assumption that the data must be wrong because the theory couldn't possible be.
--MarkusQ
Re:The truth is somewhere in the middle (Score:3, Insightful)
I had a friend who made a minor discovery while in undergrad, simply because he didn't fudge his data in a lab assignment. He got graded down for it, and decided to redo the experiment. When he got the same results, he started asking around and found out that quite a few of his classmates had al
Slashdot experts (Score:5, Insightful)
"But Chris Reynolds of the University of Maryland, in Baltimore, US, says the evidence for a MECO inside this quasar is not convincing."
Apparently the experts are not conviced about this "interesting" observation but at slashdot the expert will come to a final conclusion. How many slashdot posters actualy are qualified to talk about these subjects?
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:2)
Having a strong opinion on something doesn't mean I have to actually know anything about it
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:5, Funny)
Ah, another string theorist!
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:4, Insightful)
"Mere lack of doubt does not imply understanding"
( "Uji", paragraph #2, in: Shôbogenzô )
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:2)
Take for example how strict some mathematicians reacted when some English person tried to solve Fermat's theorem. He was met with incredible scepsis bordering hostility and bullying. In the end he proved them all wrong.
So even the specialists are keen to make mistakes based on emotional foundations.
As one lamp serves to dispel a thousand years of darkness, so one flash of wisdom destroys ten thousand years of ignorance. -- Hui-Neng
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:2)
Re: Slashdot experts (Score:5, Interesting)
> Apparently the experts are not conviced about this "interesting" observation but at slashdot the expert will come to a final conclusion. How many slashdot posters actualy are qualified to talk about these subjects?
The named researchers aren't neutral observers in some grand BH vs. MECO debate; they're the proponents of the MECO idea. See for example the bibliography at the bottom of this article [godofcreation.com]. (And while you're at it, notice the author's persecution complex, his attempt to dismiss scientific dating methods at the very end, and, of course, the curious URL.)
Doens't mean they're wrong, but it's useful to keep in mind that they're partisans in a debate, offering an interpretation of some observations that they think supports their side of the debate. They haven't convinced Reynolds, and the persecution complex displayed in the linked article suggests that they haven't had much luck convincing other people about MECOs in the past.
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless, of course, what you talk about counts as hate speech. Then you may speak of it, but only if you accept that you could be prosecuted legally--you do not, in Canada, have the right to say whatever you want, whenever you want.
Speaking only about Canadian rights here, the rest of you understand.
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot experts (Score:5, Insightful)
Please give the name, and date of execution, of the last person executed by gas chamber (or any other means) in the Federal Republic of Germany for having "Nazi-like beliefs."
Today, questioning thoughts about human evolution or global warming are practically considered hate speech.
No, the "questioning thoughts" are not hateful; they are, however, universally incoherent and contradictory with the data. What's hateful is that they are then picked up by political partisans and used in an attempt to control policy.
Okay, dumb question then. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Okay, dumb question then. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Okay, dumb question then. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Okay, dumb question then. (Score:3, Informative)
Penthouse (Score:5, Informative)
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/07/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Hawking#Losi
Re:Penthouse (Score:5, Funny)
Ha! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ha! (Score:4, Interesting)
With the interstellar travel system worked out by Kip Thorne. There's a funny story behind that. One of Thorne's pet peeves is science fiction stories that just hand-wave things like faster than light travel. One day, he and Sagan, who were friends, were talking, and Sagan tells Thorne he is writing a science fiction book, and sheepishly admits he is using faster than light travel and hand waved it. When Thorne finishes being outraged, Sagan asks him if he can fix it. Thorne tells him no, it's not possible--and then a bit later thinks of a way to do it, and works out the math. That's what appeared in the book.
Between the time he worked it out, and the time it appeared in the book, Thorne found another use for it. He put it on the final exam for the class he teaches on gravitation. Just the physics of the worm holes, not anything about how they could maybe be used for travel. He wanted to see if any of the students would see that, or if they would just solve the equations without thinking about or realizing what they mean. He was disappointed that the later is what happened.
I got this from a very interesting book Thorne was writing for the general public. He kept his drafts in 644 files in a 755 directory on a Unix system in the physics department, so all of us who worked there at the time eagerly read them. Some of that material ended up in his "Black Holes and Time Warps: Einstein's Outrageous Legacy" book, but I don't recall if this Sagan story did.
Vague data + wild supposition = NEWS FLASH! (Score:5, Insightful)
Cosmology isn't my field but the data here is incredibly vague. I'm not sure this deserves more than a raised eyebrow and an "Okay...now come up with something a little less tenuous". Interpretation of data is an art in itself and can be wildly skewed by the observer's own opinions - show mw that this hasn't happened here.
let's side with caution for now (Score:5, Insightful)
Until further obervations is being done and it is being confirmed it's truelly a MECO (or other MECOs are observed), then we really can't get say anything beyond wild speculation (which is what slashdot is very good at
Most probably, it will turn out to be not a true MECO, but rather an odd variant of a black hole.
If it DOES turn out to be a MECO, then, as theory predicts, there can't be any black holes - so then all our past obsrvations must have been wrong or misinterpreted. And if it turns out we have MECO's AND blak holes...well, then something very, very, very wrong must be going on with our current understanding of the universe and all the theories thusfar.
Which, actually, would be a fantastic thing to science, contrary to what some might believe.
Re:let's side with caution for now (Score:3, Informative)
Singularities (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Singularities (Score:2)
Who's to say that the point of focused matter and energy must be a singularity?
Re: Singularities (Score:2)
I don't think you'll have any luck finding a physicist who thinks sigularities actually exist in black holes or actually existed at the start of the big bang. In fact, AIUI, that's why bigbangologists don't try to extrapolate back beyond one planck time "
The third option (Score:5, Insightful)
The option is that neither of these theories are correct or rather neither is entirely correct. Both may still be partially true, and probably both are to a certain extent.
Newton was right on with his theories, yet they were proven to be incorrect, and they are still the first thing a physics student learns today. I find the idea of "if phenomina A exists then phenomina B, that we have also have some evidence for, cannot exist" because when you get right down to it we don't understand our universe we perceive it.
Can't be! (Score:2)
Uhoh (Score:2)
Schrödinger would've loved this problem.
Schrödinger (Score:5, Funny)
Quasars don't exist anymore (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Quasars don't exist anymore (Score:2)
Re:Quasars don't exist anymore (Score:3, Interesting)
Does it? There is some debate going on about how constant the Constants of the Universe really were [space.com] in the past, so the GP might actually be on to something...
Re:Quasars don't exist anymore (Score:2, Interesting)
The truth is out there (Score:2)
Neo-con physics (Score:5, Funny)
Wilting, politically correct, lefty-libby physics (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe we should just ask it how it feels to think that it's a MECO, and no matter what it says, start up a government program designed to empower its sense of communinity with the black holes. Then, if Kofi Annan decides that the arrangement is suitably free of human suffering that no one in Europe will notice, we can assign a series of attractive Hollywood types to set the tone for more research by doing some short publicity pieces that will help all MECOs feel better about ejecting mass, even if it hurts other stellar objects (which isn't their fault, since the laws of physics are really just The Establishment and Hawking is just The Man, running Big Physics from his position of authority-backed, but morally weak institutional power).
Re:Neo-con physics (Score:4, Funny)
The true neo-con philosophy is to:
1. Invest in MECO futures.
2. Invade it's surface with just enough troops to create chaos, but not enough to actually accomplish any other real objective.
3. Come up with the "kill its plasma and convert it to black holeness" understory to keep the conservative yokel voting base exited, so you don't get kicked out of office halfway through. (because the neo-con philosophy is based on Straussian doctrine that "religion is the opiate of the masses - and we need to keep pumping it to control them - for their own good).
4. Wait for the escalating violence and chaos cause MECO futures traders to speculate the price up 400%.
5. Profit.
(wait - was that for their own good or ours? Oh well, chalk it up to "enlightened self-interest")
Could someone with some knowledge explain... (Score:3, Interesting)
Wrong thread? (Score:2, Funny)
the bet (Score:2, Informative)
Occam's Razor (Score:5, Informative)
This is yet another one of these things where an observational astronomer who just doesn't like black holes comes up with some incredibly complex theory to explain their oberservations so they don't need a black hole to explain them. There is an incredible resistance towards black holes in some parts of the astronomical community. Saying that "A black hole can't do this" when our models of accretion discs arount black holes are still at the state they are in i.e. fixed background metric, many models are only HD not MHD (no magnetic fields in the disc) is just not backed up by the facts.
This reminds me of the whole "we don't need black holes to explain jets" discussion a couple of years back.
Besides I do not se how the existence of Mecos would prevent the existence of black holes in general. We are still using the same Einstein Equations, right?
I think the operand word in the article is "controversial". Occam's Razor is a good rule of thumb.
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Interesting)
If you told me you had a horse in your back yard, I'd look at it and if it looked like a horse I'd believe what you said. If you told me you had a unicorn in your back yard, I'd take a good hard look at it, make sure the horn is attached, take DNA samples and analyze them
Another issue entirely is the fact that this whole MECO theory is based on the assumption that plasma might behave oddly/unexpectedly under extreme conditions. I have no problem with that idea. But to leap from that to saying that if plasma behaves in an unexpected way in extreme conditions it means that no black holes can exist... that's a stretch.
Vote for Meco (Score:4, Funny)
No singularity, but Meco did come out with that that singularly awesome Star Wars and Other Galactic Funk [wikipedia.org] album back in '77. Take that, black holes!
The bet is the other way around (Score:3, Insightful)
Hawkins called the bet an insurance policy so he would not be empty handed if black holes did not exist after all...
Paper explaining MECO's (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.citebase.org/fulltext?format=applicati
As a physicist (though not a cosmologist) it looks not at all convincing.
Re:Paper explaining MECO's (Score:5, Informative)
If the contraints they impose on the stress-energy tensor (i.e. the the assumptions they make about the behavior of matter) are always enforced in the universe, I think they'd have a problem with creating neutron stars.
One problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
speed of light (Score:3, Interesting)
What are you talking about? (Score:3, Interesting)
And its angular momentum will be unchanged. So what's the problem?
The math is difficult to reproduce on a slashdot posting, but I'll leave it to anyone interested as homework. Suffice it to say that for L = an
Re:speed of light (Score:3, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerr_metric [wikipedia.org]
Where d'ya get that from? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:MECO MECO (Score:2)
But I always thought MECO was Main Engine Cut Off.
As for your
Re:Particles popping in and out of existence??? (Score:5, Informative)
Now, the really funky part is Hawking Radiation... You take a black hole with its event horizon, and at the edge, you have a particle-antiparticle pair form... They fly apart, and one of them crosses the line, getting sucked into the black hole, while the other escapes - and now you've actually gained a particle "radiating" away from the black hole. Because of a whole bunch of complicated stuff, this means that the black hole itself eventually evaporates (bigger it is, the longer it takes, though).
Oh, and this has been confirmed, since it's the driving force behind the Casimir Effect... Put two parallel plates close together, and the spontaneous particles between them can only form in wavelengths equal to multiples of the distance they're apart. But, outside the plates, any wavelength can form. So, you end up with more pressure outside the plates than between them, and they get pushed together. What makes it really stand out is, unlike gravity and magnetism with their inverse-square laws, the Casimir Effect has an inverse-fourth relationship. Halve the distance between the plates, and the force is 16 times stronger.