Laser Light Re-creates 'Black Holes' in the Lab 245
yodasz writes "The New Scientist reports that a team of researchers from the UK were able to recreate a black hole's event horizon in the lab by firing a laser pulse down an optical fibre. The team's observations confirm predictions made by cosmologists and now they are trying to prove Hawking's hypothesis of escaping particles, dubbed Hawking radiation. 'The first pulse distorts the optical properties of the fibre simply by traveling through it. This distortion forces the speedy probe wave to slow down dramatically when it catches up with the slower pulse and tries to move through it. In fact, the probe wave becomes trapped and can never overtake the pulse's leading edge, which effectively becomes a black hole event horizon, beyond which light cannot escape.'"
Black Hole (Score:5, Funny)
That would suck.
Re:Black Hole (Score:5, Funny)
It would blow (Score:5, Funny)
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Wow. That just blew my mind.
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Course this whole article is a study in "Physics is like sex, sure it has practical applications but thats not why we do it!" =D
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1) That they can create a black hole
2) That such ridiculous small black holes would evaporate before fucking my day.
Motherfuckers! What's wrong with just simulating that with a badass supercomputer? Making experiments is so XX century....
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Re:Test Methodology (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Black Hole (Score:5, Informative)
it is currently IMPOSSIBLE to produce any kind of singularity. The LHC has a chance, infinitesimal, to do so, but that's still quite a ways off.
Re:Black Hole (Score:4, Funny)
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This event has never been repeated.
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Obviously not. Don't flame people for what you alone are guilty of... it makes people wince.
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How sad that we need to shoehorn observations about
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Sort of, similar to the way the scientific establishment has suppressed radical ideas until the later, sometimes much later became mainstream.
Scientists are human and as such often do care for dogma more than data. This always been and will always be.
Presently, mainstream cosmological theories largely ignore the electric force as a major, often dominant factor in the operation of the large scale universe. There are two forces at work in t
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"They l
Am I slow? (Score:2, Insightful)
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However, up until now, we had no real way to measure it unless we happened to see a small black hole blow up, something that we haven't figured out how to find.
Re:Am I slow? (Score:4, Informative)
I read about it in "The Physics of Star Trek", but Wikipedia has something on it too:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawking_radiation [wikipedia.org]
Re:Am I slow? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Am I slow? (Score:4, Interesting)
One fortunate consequence of this is that smaller black holes 'evaporate' more quickly, and the microscopic black holes we'll likely be generating at the Large Hadron Collider will cease to exist before they've even had sufficient time to absorb a neutrino.
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but that wont happen at the hardon collider, because the black hole doesn't have any mass near it to grow. It's not like it's being created on a big rock or anything..
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Indeed, have you ever tried to stretch a Planck mass over two or more Planck lengths? Now *that's* hard.
Especially attaching the 'lil Planck handgrips at the ends.
Pug
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Artificial event horizon != Artificial black hole.
Somehow I highly doubt that even if they can get the fiberoptics to 1000 degrees centigrade and perform this experiment that they'll get any hawking radiation out of it.
Re:Am I slow? (Score:5, Informative)
One of the open questions facing physics is whether the event horizon of a black hole destroys information. It's not just the event horizon itself that is interesting, the destruction of information is by itself a legitimately interesting question by itself.
If we can create an optical event horizon that also seems to destroy information, this may allow us to witness how the Universe responds to such information destruction. This is radically easier than creating a large enough black hole to observe these effects. Black hole horizons are interesting in many ways; this may allow us to extract and experiment on one aspect of them.
I've seen a few proposals for the creation of an optical black hole, this is the first claim I've seen that someone may have actually created one.
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Not so. If you run a beam of electrons through a magnetic deflection, the will deflect in a particular direction with the degree of bending dependent on the magnetic field and the energy of the electrons. If you replace the electrons with positrons, they will deflect in the opposite direction. This also works with other charged particles and their anti-particles.
Has anybody EVER actually observed a black hole or something being swallowed up by one?
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But, no, we haven't actually 'seen' one.
Pug
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From the descriptions it seems that these particles are being created spontanously outside the black hole, and one falls in. To me, that would mean that the black hole actually gains mass (one particle).
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I thought Hawking radiation had something to do with the force of gravity at the event horizon
No. Hawking radiation is due an application of the uncertainty principle. Nothing can escape from a black hole inside the event horizon, however the exact location of the event horizon cannot be measured precisely and if it is in fact variable within the limits of the uncertainty principle, some mass that was previously inside the black hole could find itself outside the black hole at some instant and could theoretically escape. That escaping mass is called Hawking radiation.
I'm not a physicist either,
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Sounds safe (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sounds safe (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sounds safe (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, your way of describing it doesn't generate NEAR as many hits on the ads...um, article.
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Or something. Damn, I've been scarred by goatse for life.
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I have to wonder - if every species that ever formed across the galaxy runs into that delimma at some point - that their science of destruction outranges their science of defense and mobility, and one crazy guy blows the whole thing
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If I took a spoon, and somehow crushed it down to a singularity, I'd have a black hole with the same amount of mass and gravity as the spoon did. You could hold it in your hand.
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A black hole event horizon? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Pug
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Layne
oblig futurama quote (Score:2, Funny)
Cubert: Duh! Black holes don't need food.
Bret: Neither do nerds!
oblig (Score:2, Funny)
Background info needed.. (Score:5, Funny)
How the universe works (Score:5, Funny)
He's kinda messed up because he was alone for like, eternity, until he made up some friends in his head, but he's incapable of imagining anything that is actually his peer, so he secretly hates us all for not providing the companionship he needs. That is how the universe works.
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Thanks for making my day.
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That's how the universe works.
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In the Beginning, the Universe was Created.
This has made a lot of people very angry, and been widely regarded as a bad move.
Many races believe that it was created by some sort of god, though the Jatravartid people of Viltvodle VI firmly believe that the entire universe was in fact sneezed out of the nose of a being called the Great Green Arkleseizure.
The Jatravartids, who live in perpetual fear of the time they call "The Coming of the Great White Hankerchief", are small blue creatures
Old SF (Score:2)
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I remember reading a short story, probably in the 60's, with a plot like this. The story starts with investigators trying to understand a rash of mysterious structural failures around the world, and tracing them to tiny vertical holes drilled through whatever failed; including building
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I sure hope nothing like that happens with these experiments.
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James P. Hogan's "Thrice Upon a Time" discusses a prototype fusion reactor which accidentally sends two
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OK,
black hole analogy is a stretch (Score:3, Informative)
Re:black hole analogy is a stretch (Score:5, Informative)
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As a follow up to my own comment, arXiv has what looks like the (a?) preprint for this current optical-fibre work arXiv:0711.4796v2 [gr-qc] [arxiv.org]?
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Another user in this thread has posted several interesting references which deserve some attention. It seems what they have created is a cavity made of light which is behaving analogously to a black _body_ (not hole) by effectively not permitting ot
Oblig... (Score:4, Funny)
hmmmm (Score:2)
rindler horizon (Score:5, Interesting)
A phenomen that has some similarities with a black hole, but without gravitational effects involved.
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A phenomen that has some similarities with a black hole, but without gravitational effects involved.
whatcouldpossiblygowrong (Score:2)
Interesting test conditions... (Score:2, Insightful)
FTA:
This makes me wonder how they're di
Editors fix the title please (Score:2)
Obligatory... (Score:2)
Unexpected results. (Score:2)
Hey I created a "Black Hole too"! (Score:2, Funny)
Galactic Darwin Award (Score:2)
Please enough already... (Score:4, Informative)
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Furthermore, the Germans claim to be able to see through people with what they call an X-Ray machine. Preposterous! Even the name sounds like bad science! I mean who would call it an "X-Ray" machine?
Ok, jokes aside, the New Scientist has never deliberately claimed more than is possible, although like any paper for the masses, the headlines are somewhat glorified and exaggera
Re:Please enough already... (Score:4, Insightful)
After a cursory glance thru TFA, it sounds like light waves are just interfering in a way that prevents the lagging, faster wave from propagating past the slower, leading wave. Can any physics people out there explain how this could possibly be interpreted as "we created a black hole in a lab environment"?
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Re:I don't get sending a "slow" and then "fast" wa (Score:2, Informative)
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Re:I don't get sending a "slow" and then "fast" wa (Score:2)
Re:I don't get sending a "slow" and then "fast" wa (Score:3, Interesting)
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Then it will be "bl0wz3rs".
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Fun sci-fi trash read though... he pretty much through every prediction he could think of at the wall and hoped they would stick.
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But going with your whole evil super weapon train of thought - a practical black hole weapon would have to be pretty massive. Like really really massive. I'm too lazy to do t
Brin's Earth is good -- except the end (Score:2)
Except for ending. Brin must have been smoking some pretty good stuff to come up with that. O_o
Calcium carbonate crystals (Score:3, Informative)
It was learning about this at Cambridge that made me decide that crystallographers had to be