Proton falling into a Black hole?

In summary: They only experience the tidal forces due to their proximity to a black hole.In summary, a proton would experience tidal forces that would tend to distort its shape, but the effect would be very small.
  • #1
cragar
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3
I don't know if this is the right place to post this but would a proton falling into a black hole experience tidal forces. If the proton is like a wave could we stretch the wave out, that is probably really bad wording. Or does the quantum of energy move all together?
 
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  • #2
A proton is a composite object with quarks inside, and the proton has a size, about 1 fm=10^-15 m, which is essentially the typical distance between the quarks. In the frame of an observer hovering just outside the event horizon, the proton falls past at a velocity close to c, so that the de Broglie wavelength corresponding to its center-of-mass momentum is very short -- much shorter than the size of the proton itself. In a frame comoving with the proton, its de Broglie wavelength is infinite. Because a proton has a finite size, it would certainly experience tidal forces that would tend to distort its shape, i.e., cause the correlations among the quarks to change, probably giving it an ellipsoidal shape. However, tidal forces have less effect on smaller objects, and a proton is very small, so I think for any astrophysical black hole the effect would be much too small to measure.
 
  • #3
bcrowell said:
Because a proton has a finite size, it would certainly experience tidal forces that would tend to distort its shape, i.e., cause the correlations among the quarks to change, probably giving it an ellipsoidal shape.
How would you quantify this tidal force in the framework of classical GR if at all since the equation of geodesic deviation is proportional to the four - velocity which is undefined for a photon?

EDIT: yeah...nevermind
 
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  • #4
WannabeNewton said:
How would you quantify this tidal force in the framework of classical GR if at all since the equation of geodesic deviation is proportional to the four - velocity which is undefined for a photon?

Are you confusing proton and photon? The thread is about proton.
 
  • #5
PAllen said:
Are you confusing proton and photon? The thread is about proton.

Wow that's embarrassing. I read it as photon. Thats what happens when I don't drink coffee.
 
  • #6
No but it would be interesting to consider tidal forces on a photon.
@ bcrowell, How can you tell me a proton has a finite size if its wave.
If we can I would like to discuss how the tidal forces would effect the photon.
 
  • #7
cragar said:
@ bcrowell, How can you tell me a proton has a finite size if its wave.

Mm...what's your level of background in quantum mechanics?
 
  • #8
I have self taught myself a little bit about QM out of Griffiths . I know what a momentum operator is, Quantum harmonic oscillator . Spin matrices . But still a very elementary understanding of it. But I know a little bit.
 
  • #9
cragar said:
have self taught myself a little bit about QM out of Griffiths . I know what a momentum operator is, Quantum harmonic oscillator . Spin matrices . But still a very elementary understanding of it. But I know a little bit.

OK, that's plenty. The idea is that if you want to describe an n-body system in one dimension, you need n coordinates. Those coordinates don't have to be just the x coordinates of each particle. For example, if your system consists of three quarks, A, B, and C, then you might want to take one coordinate to be the position X of the center of mass, one to be xA, and the third to be xB. The advantage is that the behavior of X is fixed trivially by conservation of momentum, so that simplifies the problem. The wavefunction in terms of X is simply a sine wave. The momentum P associated with X is the momentum associated with the center of mass motion.

So for example if you ask why an elephant doesn't have observable wave properties, the answer is that P is on the order of 103 in SI units, so the wavelength is on the order of 10-33 meters. The wavelength is a gazillion times smaller than the elephant itself.
 
  • #10
ok , thanks for explaining that .
 
  • #11
I thought a little more about the photon version, and I don't think it makes sense to analyze that one in terms of tidal stresses. It's not a bound system that can have internal stresses. And whereas in the case of the proton there is a natural frame of reference in which to measure its elongation (the comoving frame), there is no comoving frame in the case of the photon.

I think this is similar to a contrast that comes up in the case of cosmological redshifts. Photon wave-trains lengthen over cosmological time, and this can be interpreted in terms of the expansion of space itself as they travel through it. But protons, solar systems, etc., do not undergo any significant cosmological expansion.
 
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1. What is a black hole?

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

2. How does a proton fall into a black hole?

As a proton approaches a black hole, it will be pulled in by the intense gravitational force. As it gets closer, the gravitational force becomes stronger and the proton will begin to accelerate, eventually reaching the speed of light before reaching the event horizon of the black hole.

3. Can a proton escape from a black hole?

Once a proton crosses the event horizon of a black hole, it cannot escape. This is because the escape velocity, which is the speed needed to overcome the gravitational pull, is greater than the speed of light.

4. What happens to a proton when it falls into a black hole?

When a proton falls into a black hole, it becomes a part of the black hole. Its mass and energy contribute to the overall mass and energy of the black hole, making it larger and more powerful.

5. Can we observe a proton falling into a black hole?

It is not possible to directly observe a proton falling into a black hole since nothing can escape from it. However, scientists can observe the effects of a black hole's gravitational pull on surrounding matter, which can provide evidence of a proton falling into it.

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