First "Observation" of Hawking Radiation 86
KentuckyFC writes "Italian physicists are claiming the first observation of Hawking radiation, but not from a black hole. Instead they've spotted it streaming from a sonic horizon in a Bose Einstein Condensate (abstract on the arXiv). That's consistent with previous predictions but they're claiming the 'first' even though the experiment was only a numerical simulation. Does that really count?"
Maybe they read /. (Score:5, Funny)
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Story is distorted (what a surprise) (Score:3, Informative)
The story is grossly distorted -- what a surprise. I was going to say that at least it was distorted by author of the linked-to news item, rather than by the /. submitter, but now I see they seem to be the same person ("KFC" and "KentuckyFC").
The abstract that is linked to merely claims "numerical evidence", not "first observation", and to get from that unobjectionable claim to the more sensational false accusation, one must distort the paper itself ( http://arxiv.org/pdf/0803.0507v1 [arxiv.org] ), which says:
reverse engineer it (Score:2, Funny)
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Doesn't Count (Score:5, Insightful)
A numerical model is little more than a highly specific and round off error prone implementation of existing analytical results. All these guys have done, at most, is shown the correctness of Hawking's analysis. If that.
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If they had found no radiation, that would not have been proof of anything since a flawed simulation would produce a flawed result. However, the odds of this particular flawed result (producing hawking radiation under very specific circumstances)must
Re:Doesn't Count (Score:5, Informative)
Without knowing the details of both theories, it's hard for me to judge. Basically, if their formalism is more or less isomorphic to Hawking's (without their realizing it) - then all they've done is do Hawking's work over again.
If they used independent formalism to get Hawking radiation, then it's a good sign, and shows that their theory is consistent with Hawking's (and perhaps later someone will link the two).
In either case, they did not produce any evidence. At best, they're saying, "If you look at this our way, it is consistent with what Hawking predicted."
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If, however, the simulation is derived from seperate data (experimental, different aspects of BEC theory) then the results could be meaningful as they would show that the two different sets of data are in agreement.
Could count... (Score:2)
If they used independent formalism to get Hawking radiation, then it's a good sign, and shows that their theory is consistent with Hawking's (and perhaps later someone will link the two).
In either case, they did not produce any evidence.
If they have correctly use an independent formalism to verify Hawking radiation, they may not technically have "produced" any new evidence, but it means that all the existing evidence that backs the independent formalism, now also counts as evidence towards Hawking radiation.
[ I haven't read the fine article either. ]
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They have not verified Hawking radiation. They did not observe Hawking Radiation in a Bose-Einstein Condensate. They produced a computer program that draws an animation of what Hawking radiation might look like and then watched it - thus they "observed" the radiation just like you or I might observe the existence of Martians by looking at the right Bugs Bunny cartoon ("Look a Martian! And he's wondering where the ka-boom is!
Verifications vs validations (Score:1)
They have not verified Hawking radiation.
A verification consist of comparing the predictions made with one formalism with the predictions made with another (presumably more trusted) formalism, and see that they match.
A validation consist of comparing the predictions made with one formalism with actual measurements, and see that they match.
Verifications are not as strong as validations, but none the less quite useful. Typically it works the other way around though, we verify a numerical model against one or more analytical solutions. If they mat
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I agree. Physics is an attempt to model the universe mathematically. The fact that two models agree says nothing whatsoever about whether either is an accurate map of the universe.
GIGO (Score:2)
That's the problem with computer simulations that are unsupported by real observations: you never know if there's a problem with your input data, a bug in your simulation program, or a serious weakness in the theory you are simulating, or some combination of all of these. So it's hard to believe your outputs until you can check them against a real measurement.
Only numerical simulation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Only numerical simulation (Score:5, Funny)
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I am Cornhawkio! I need TP for my blackhole!
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And 100% of String Theory. If you have a theory you can't ever test is it a real theory at all?
First Observation of The Meaning Of Life (Score:2, Funny)
It's just a numerical simulation, but everybody knows it counts anyway.
Re:First Observation of The Meaning Of Life (Score:4, Funny)
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You must have one extra finger in each hand and... Ok, let's stop right there.
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Thinking in circles anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
I guess I will make a theory stating that fairies exist... simulate that in a computer, and when fairies appear in my simulation I write an article that I have observed fairies. Mmmmhh, this certainly sounds like proving ID.
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Since they live in the information equivilent of a closed and shackled ecosystem, this could hardly do any damage.
Re:Thinking in circles anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
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so, either:
1) fairies exists
2) physics is fundamentally wrong
whichever it is, it's pretty profound.
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To turn it into a proof, you need to get the UN to claim that "every non-kook scientist in the world agrees that this is true, and every scientist who does not agree is a kook, or is being paid to disagree by a global corporate conspiracy that is trying to suppress this proof". Then you get the Nobel commi
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Well that's not exactly the case. We have a theory of how the world behaves, and Hawking Radiation is a predicted emergent property of that theory. It's not an axiom, it's a predicted consequence, so it isn't a given based on the theory. Here, we have a detailed simulation that shows that yes, if the underlying theory is correct, then we should expect to see Hawking Radiation.
It is
What an interesting question (Score:5, Funny)
If so, then many slashdotters are no longer virgins.
Slightly OT: Unruh effect (Score:5, Interesting)
My first thought from the headline was Unruh effect [wikipedia.org]. It's a kind of Hawking radiation you can get in a particle accelerator. It just happens that with black holes, the acceleration is due to gravity, but other sources of acceleration also work. There are huge decelerations from c to nearly 0 at heavy ion collisions, for example.
I first heard of the effect when some fellow physicists were considering the idea of tiny black holes created in particle physics experiments. It turned out that the presence of Hawking-like radiation doesn't necessarily mean a black hole.
Well, it also turns out that this has nothing directly to do with the article, but might be +i, interesting nevertheless.
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Your comments have everything to do with the paper in question.
How ironic. Usually people don't read the article, then make irrelevant comments that they think are relevant; here you managed to do the exact opposite.
Black holes should radiate anyway (Score:2)
an object travelling inside the well is doomed to never escape without additional energy.
it will spiral to its death after some time period.
If two objects at this same point collide and explode, then some of the matter will have gained additional energy and will escape the gravity well, the rest of the body will spiral to its doom.
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1. Cusp? What cusp? That's not how the term is used, in either popular language, nor in physics.
2. If I understand "cusp" to mean the location at which an object released from rest will *just* fall to earth, there's no such location. ALL objects will, from any location (given no other mass or energy in the universe, of course).
3. If one allows an initial momentum to your object, then the "cusp" location can be anywhere
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Re:Black holes should radiate anyway (Score:4, Informative)
So, it's a little more complicated/interesting than you described; I'm sure it would be even better if someone here could describe it from an actual background in physics, instead of the armchair variety I can muster.
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...and you wonder why the ID crowd looks annoyed when they're not allowed to use the same "well, it just appeared!" argument...
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The easiest way to conceive of it, in very basic terms, is that the Electron/Positron pair spontaneously converts to mass from the energy surrounding the black hole. The positron falls into the hole, and annihilates with an electron's worth of mass already in the singularity. The electron from the initial pair escapes. The black hole has been reduced in mass/energy by the amount of one electron.
If the electron, instead, falls
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Now, a negative mass particle can't normally exist for very long, so it has to recombine in short order with the original particle and they cancel each other out.
However if the negative mass particle is trapped by the event horizon, "not very long" gets stretch
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Yeah, you'd think that, wouldn't you? Unfortunately, relativistic physics do not follow the same rules as newtonian physics, and the former are the rules you need to use for anything that may potentially have enough energy to escape a black hole.
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Just a simulation (Score:2)
Streaming from a what!? (Score:1, Funny)
What's next? (Score:3, Funny)
Shenanigans! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Shenanigans! (Score:4, Insightful)
Computer simulations are acceptable proof in the 'new' science. Even flawed computer simulations are acceptable proof as they prove that the simulations are getting better.
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I'm sorry, but I'm with the "no way this counts" camp. Theories have to be tested in the physical world to be proved. Theoretical physics included folks. That's why we have supercolliders and Z-machines, duh! Numerical analysis can help predict physical behavior but it is not law until it is proved in the real world. Sorry guys.
Sorry dude, experimental evidence doesn't prove squat either.
Newton's experimental evidence for adding of velocities was correct until Einstein. And is corpuscular theory of light was correct until Young's "double slit" experiment. So even when an experiment demonstrates a theory, it doesn't prove it, is only shows that its not incorrect.
Ugh. (Score:3, Insightful)
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By suggesting they have standards, and that as such, this small group of Italians is disgusting by contrast?
Yes, and the Vatican's model showed crystal spheres. Models can show wrong things. That's what makes it disgusting that these people are claiming to have observed so
oops (Score:1)
God Exists! (Score:5, Funny)
If true, I'm not surprised (Score:2)
This is far from proof. But I would not really be surprised, just at an intuitive level, if Hawking radiation can be found at ANY type of horizon. Hawking radiation itself was predicted by a post-doc whose name I forget, promptly forgotten for several years, then it was picked up and championed by Hawking. Hawking himself wasn't the one who made the original connection between entropy and certain horizon equations, although he did start the process in motion with a proof that the area of the event horizon c
Simulation (Score:2)
Observation vs Prediction? (Score:1)
I'm prepared to be corrected, but doesn't that count as a prediction rather than an observation?
Does that really count? (Score:2)
MC Hawking (Score:2)