Do black holes agree with the pauli exclusion?

In summary, there is disagreement about whether all/most neutrons in a black hole are in the same state due to the undefined momenta and volume of particles in a singularity. It is also uncertain if a quantum state can even be defined for a black hole. However, it is believed that a black hole must have a quantum state in a quantum theory of gravity. The concept of degeneracy pressure is useful in describing the collapse of moderate size stars, but it cannot be overcome and will eventually lead to the formation of a black hole. The potential approach is limited in its understanding of black hole formation and does not invalidate the general theorems of general relativity. Overall, it is unclear if a neutron can exist in a black
  • #1
LostConjugate
850
3
Is there agreement here or are all/most of the neutrons in the same state?
 
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  • #2
One cannot apply such a principle in that case : the momenta are undefined, arbitrarily high, for such academic "particles confined to zero volume".
 
  • #3
So there is no quantum state for a black hole?
 
  • #4
LostConjugate said:
So there is no quantum state for a black hole?
Yes, there must certainly be a quantum state associated to a black hole in a quantum theory of gravity. This quantum state is just not suitably defined using the observables you refer to.

About your first message, it is not correct to say that all particles which has fallen in a black hole are in the same quantum state only because they appear to us as occupying the same zero volume. There are many wrong things about this idea. The first thing that is wrong seems to me that those particles could all have different momenta. The next wrong thing would be that this "volume" is itself ill-defined in current theories, it is the volume of the singularity.

About your second message, one should not assume that the quantum state of a black hole is defined by the quantum states of all particles which have fallen. A black hole carries as much entropy as possible, so it has "forgotten" as much as can be forgotten from the fallen material.
 
  • #5
What about when the star is collapsing and the volume is still very small but finite.

I will try to explain what I was thinking when I posted.

From what I understand the reason materials can only be compressed as much as they can (degeneracy pressure) is because of the pauli exclusion principle.

If I have this right.. as electrons or any spin 1/2 particle must enter higher and higher energy levels the associated eigenfunction puts their position probability further and further away (in position space) from the central potential.

I am wondering if when the "degeneracy pressure" is overcome if a particle of 1/2 spin is forced into an energy state already occupied by 2 particles.
 
  • #6
The concept of degeneracy pressure is useful to describe slow processes of collapse for moderate size stars. This degeneracy can never be overcome. Ever more energy must be put into the system to excite the fermions into higher momenta, until so much energy is stored that the BH forms.

If you think in terms of a potential, the fermions trapped into it always have their wavefunction decaying exponentially beyond the surface of the potential, they remain trapped because there is no "valley" into which to tunnel (the gravitational potential is always below the vacuum). So as you add energy into the system, allowing ever higher harmonic levels inside the potential, general conservation of energy tells us that we build a depth of the gravitational potential increasing faster than higher harmonics are being occupied. I do not remember explicitly doing such a calculation, but if the depth would not grow fast enough, then our calculations would indicate that no black hole form, which is contrary to the general theorems and would only invalidate our approximations (the BH collapse is generic and does not require specific initial conditions such as spherical symmetry).
 
  • #7
Quantum field theory in curved (here: singular) spacetime is afaik not well understood; there is not even a definition of "vacuum" on top of which a QFT with its particle-like excitations could be constructed. Therefore in a singular spacetime like a black hole there is no concept for "particles" in the usual sense.
 
  • #8
I agree with tom.stoer and think his point is quite relevant to go beyond what has been said. So to clarify my post above in 2 points, I only meant 1) specifically where the concept of pressure degeneracy is used (to compute stability condition when collapse does to a BH does not occur) 2) the limitation within the potential approach, if we contradicted the general GR theorems for BH formation, we would only invalidate this approach, not the theorems (potential approach is non-relativistic btw)
 
  • #9
humanino said:
The concept of degeneracy pressure is useful to describe slow processes of collapse for moderate size stars. This degeneracy can never be overcome. Ever more energy must be put into the system to excite the fermions into higher momenta, until so much energy is stored that the BH forms.

If you think in terms of a potential, the fermions trapped into it always have their wavefunction decaying exponentially beyond the surface of the potential, they remain trapped because there is no "valley" into which to tunnel (the gravitational potential is always below the vacuum). So as you add energy into the system, allowing ever higher harmonic levels inside the potential, general conservation of energy tells us that we build a depth of the gravitational potential increasing faster than higher harmonics are being occupied. I do not remember explicitly doing such a calculation, but if the depth would not grow fast enough, then our calculations would indicate that no black hole form, which is contrary to the general theorems and would only invalidate our approximations (the BH collapse is generic and does not require specific initial conditions such as spherical symmetry).

humanino said:
I agree with tom.stoer and think his point is quite relevant to go beyond what has been said. So to clarify my post above in 2 points, I only meant 1) specifically where the concept of pressure degeneracy is used (to compute stability condition when collapse does to a BH does not occur) 2) the limitation within the potential approach, if we contradicted the general GR theorems for BH formation, we would only invalidate this approach, not the theorems (potential approach is non-relativistic btw)

So we don't know if 2 neutrons are occupying the same state?

We just don't know if a neutron even exists anymore once a star of this magnitude starts to collapse?
 
  • #10
GR predicts its own breakdown at singularities like a black hole or the big bang. QFT is no longer defined. Seriously we do not know if a neutron will exist at the singularity.
 
  • #11
I can only repeat that no fermion will ever occupy the same state in the collapse process. We expect all structures, including the hadronic structure of a neutron, to be torn apart under ever growing gravitational tidal forces. But if there is such a thing as a fundamental particle without structure, it could be a quark for instance, then still no two such fundamental particles will occupy the same state either. That remains valid at all times, that is to say when the available spatial volume shrinks to zero, the available momentum volume more than compensates to accommodate Heisenberg's inequality. The exact limit of zero volume, where your particle "sits on the singularity" is undefined as far as I know. I am unaware of any modification of GR or QM attempting to unify both where several fermions can occupy the same state.
 
  • #12
Thanks!
 
  • #13
I was under the impression that the degenracy state was achieved in neutron stars of a certain mass, just microseconds before they collapse into a black hole. is that wrong??
 
  • #14
billbray said:
I was under the impression that the degenracy state was achieved in neutron stars of a certain mass, just microseconds before they collapse into a black hole. is that wrong??

Which degeneracy? Neutron? Quark? The latter is yet to be observed, so you have degenerate electron matter forming White Dwarves, and DNM forming a neutron star, and maybe something between that and a BH. What happens when that is overcome is a singularity, as far as GR concerned and QM has nothing to say on the matter.
 

1. What is the Pauli exclusion principle?

The Pauli exclusion principle is a fundamental principle in quantum mechanics that states that no two identical fermions (particles with half-integer spin) can occupy the same quantum state simultaneously. In other words, no two fermions can have the same set of quantum numbers.

2. How does the Pauli exclusion principle relate to black holes?

In the context of black holes, the Pauli exclusion principle applies to the particles that make up matter. As a black hole's gravitational pull becomes stronger, particles are forced closer together, and their quantum states become more restricted. This leads to an increase in the number of particles with the same quantum numbers, violating the Pauli exclusion principle.

3. Do black holes follow the Pauli exclusion principle?

No, black holes do not follow the Pauli exclusion principle. As matter collapses to form a black hole, the intense gravitational forces overcome the effects of the exclusion principle, resulting in a state where particles with the same quantum numbers can exist in the same location.

4. What is the relationship between black holes and the exclusion principle?

The relationship between black holes and the exclusion principle is that, as a black hole's gravitational pull becomes stronger, particles are forced closer together, and their quantum states become more restricted. This leads to an increase in the number of particles with the same quantum numbers, violating the Pauli exclusion principle. This phenomenon is known as "quantum pressure" and plays a crucial role in the understanding of black holes.

5. How does the violation of the Pauli exclusion principle affect black holes?

The violation of the Pauli exclusion principle in black holes has significant consequences. It leads to a state of matter with incredibly high densities and pressures, resulting in the formation of a singularity at the center of a black hole. This singularity is a point of infinite density, where the laws of physics, including the exclusion principle, break down.

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