| Thread Closed |
Can one make inferences about what is inside a Black Hole? |
Share Thread | Thread Tools |
| Jun11-10, 11:24 AM | #1 |
|
|
Can one make inferences about what is inside a Black Hole?
Consider if you will…
…a large black hole, with an event horizon 1 light year in diameter. If an observer shoots an electron into the event horizon on one side, how long does it take for an observer on the opposite site of the black hole to register the increased electric charge and mass? Normally I’d say it would take 1 year. However, in that case it means that the black hole’s electric field and the shape of the event horizon are uneven during that time. It would mean that observers can make inferences about matter that has entered the black hole in the past by making careful observations of the shape of the event horizon, the electric field and the rotation. Is that possible? Or is the black hole a true singularity, and is the charge transmitted to the opposite site immediately? (spooky action at a distance). |
| Jun11-10, 12:09 PM | #2 |
|
Recognitions:
|
No changes in the electric field are ever going to travel faster than light. It should be said, however, that the meaning of this statement is much more subtle than in flat spacetime: light may take multiple paths between two events, and some field components may propagate faster than some of the light beams taking more circuitous paths.
It also isn't particularly clear when to say that the black hole has "absorbed" the charge. Electric fields near black holes behave a little differently from what you'd probably expect. If you take a small charge and hold it just outside the horizon of a spherically-symmetric black hole, the electric field will actually appear centered on the hole rather than the charge (unless you go very close to it). For these and other reasons, there is no straightforward answer to your question except to say that there's nothing spooky going on. |
| Jun11-10, 12:10 PM | #3 |
|
First off, there's no real need to talk about charge here. The issues are all the same if you just talk about gravity, with no E&M. If you drop an electrically neutral object into a black hole, what will happen is that the object will radiate gravitational waves on its way in. These gravitational waves will be refracted around the black hole, and they will also be Doppler shifted toward lower frequencies as they radiate up out of the gravity well. As the object approaches the event horizon, the Doppler shift as observed at infinity approaches infinity, and the waves become undetectable. Theoretically the gravitational waves start radiating at the instant when you release the object. If the observer is on the other side of the black hole, and the circumference of the event horizon is 2pi light years, then it will take at least pi years for the first waves to reach the observer, starting from the time of release.
Note that the no-hair theorems in GR are theorems about static solutions. This isn't a static solution. |
| Jun11-10, 12:13 PM | #4 |
|
Can one make inferences about what is inside a Black Hole? |
| Jun11-10, 12:21 PM | #5 |
|
|
Okay, I actually agree.
But that also seems to indicate that by carefully measuring the shape of the event horizon, gravitational waves and all, an observer can make inferences about matter that has fallen into the black hole in the past. Inferences about matter now inside the event horizon. I was under the impression that this is not supposed to be possible? |
| Jun11-10, 12:24 PM | #6 |
|
Recognitions:
|
|
| Jun11-10, 12:31 PM | #7 |
|
Recognitions:
|
|
| Thread Closed |
| Tags |
| black hole, event horizon, relativity |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads for: Can one make inferences about what is inside a Black Hole?
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| If no singularity, what’s inside a big black hole? | Beyond the Standard Model | 180 | ||
| What's inside a black hole? | Special & General Relativity | 26 | ||
| Inside a black hole? | General Astronomy | 16 | ||
| Black hole inside a larger black hole. | Cosmology | 33 | ||
| Getting inside a black hole | Astrophysics | 6 | ||