Can Black Holes Decay and How Does This Affect Their Event Horizon?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of black hole decay, which occurs when a black hole sucks in a particle and its antiparticle escapes, resulting in a decrease in the black hole's mass. This process is possible due to the creation of matter from energy near the event horizon. The event horizon can also change depending on external factors, but it is generally stable.
  • #1
Haibara Ai
14
0
http://www.superstringtheory.com/blackh/blackh3.html
the URL above says that black holes can decay, but I don't understand, if the black hole sucks in an antiparticle and the particle gets ejected in the opposite direction, doesn't the event horizon of the black hole stay the same? How does it get smaller??

Thanks
 
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  • #2
The problem is that those particle/antiparticle pairs are energy from nothing. Normally they would destroy each other and there would be no net loss or gain. However, when one is pulled into a black hole, and its pair escapes then the one that got away is new matter from nothing. Since this matter must come from somewhere it comes from the black hole.
 
  • #3
well it depends on what you mean by "nothing", which semantic use of "nothing" you anticipate here.. it is not nihilo, it is the energy-density, vacuum of particles which creates particle-antiparticle pair.s
 
  • #4
Haibara Ai said:
How does it get smaller??
One must be careful here with the definition of energy. The process of particle-antiparticle creation near the event horizon is defined locally. But then, one must look at the global effect, where spacetime is no longer flat as was approximately used in the previous setting, locally near the event horizon. It turns out that the black hole sucks in negative energy and spits out at infinity positive energy. So its mass deos decrease, and therefore it does shrink.
 
  • #5
Actually, nothing gets ejected form black holes, what happens, is that all matter that gets sucked up by the black hole goes into the black hole's center or core where it gets destroyed. Also, about the event horizon: most of the time it stays the same, but depnding on what is going on around it, it can change. For more information look at my post, why white holes don't exist. It will explain why black holes are one way.
 

1. What is a black hole?

A black hole is a region of space where the gravitational pull is so strong that nothing, including light, can escape its grasp. It is created when a massive star dies and collapses under its own gravity.

2. How big can a black hole be?

Black holes can range in size from a few miles to billions of times the mass of our sun. The smallest ones are called stellar black holes, while the largest ones are called supermassive black holes.

3. Can a black hole destroy the entire universe?

No, a black hole cannot destroy the entire universe. While they have a powerful gravitational pull, they are not powerful enough to consume the entire universe. In fact, black holes play a crucial role in the formation and evolution of galaxies.

4. Can anything escape from a black hole?

Once something crosses the event horizon, the point of no return, it cannot escape a black hole. However, some particles can escape through a process called Hawking radiation, which is a result of quantum effects near the event horizon.

5. Are there different types of black holes?

Yes, there are several types of black holes, including stellar black holes, intermediate black holes, and supermassive black holes. There are also hypothetical types such as primordial black holes and micro black holes.

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