Why do stars collapse in ot itself? Part 2

In summary, according to General relativity, gravity may be due to the curvature of space-time. This curvature is created by the mass/energy of a star, and it can lead to pressure in the material. Above about 1.44 solar masses, the famous Chandrasekhar limit, nothing can stop such a mass from collapsing to a black hole.
  • #1
PhyHunter
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I think space-time exerts a pressure on substance and it makes star to transorm black hole.I think this can be possible becuse we know that space-time is something which it can be tiltled and it can creates virtual matters.Space-time is real thing.So Can be space-time exert pressure on substance ?
 
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  • #2
Gravity, described as curved spacetime in General Relativity, can lead to pressure in the material.
For sizes significantly larger than the Schwarzschild radius, you can use the easier model of Newtonian gravity, however.
 
  • #3
I understand it thank you.Where can I find these equations ?
 
  • #4
General Relativity or Newtonian gravity? In any textbook, the corresponding Wikipedia pages and various websites in the internet.
 
  • #5
You mean gravity exerts pressure on matter
 
  • #6
Becuse I think gravity is force not pressure
 
  • #7
In purely Newtonian way gravity indeed counts as a force because otherwise the apple would not fall down but stay up.
In General relativity gravity is a space time curvature , what that means is that you don't have gravity as a separate force indeed you have mass/energy in different forms like gasses , liquids or solids around which the space time dimensions which would otherwise be uniform bends just like the coach when you sit on it.

In other words it depends on the framework you look upon one is a older simpler one the other is a younger more complex describing large scale phenomenon o which the older Newtonian one would not be enough.

But to an everyday man walking down a street gravity indeed is more of a force than a mass/energy exerted property .
 
  • #8
PhyHunter said:
Becuse I think gravity is force not pressure

Pressure is force per unit area.
 
  • #9
I think space-time exerts a pressure on substance and it makes star to transorm black hole.

I think that is an oblique way to word things; empty space-time will not make a star into a black hole. If anything it may have a bit of dark energy which is a negative repulsive pressure leading to cosmological expansion over vast distances. You can think of space-time as carrying the gravitational field analogous to how an electromagnetic field carries the EM force.

What makes a star become a black hole are the conditions described below and we model these via the Einstein Stress Energy [SET] tensor [and vacuum solutions of the Einstein Field Equation]: The SET is the source of gravity which curves space-time.

There is a decent overview here.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff_limitPRESSURE can be a component of gravity, but with regard to formation of black holes 'pressure' usually is an opposing force...a repulsive force called 'degeneracy pressure' which takes various forms. Electron degeneracy pressure means that electrons don't like being pushed into atomic nuclei and oppose gravity in such compression...and neutron degeneracy pressure results after electrons have been forced into protons by gravity...this is an even more dense state [called a neutron star]. The neutrons are really,really compact.
Above about 1.44 solar masses, the famous
Chandrasekhar limit, nothing can stop such a mass from collapsing to a Black Hole.
 
  • #10
Naty1 said:
Above about 1.44 solar masses, the famous
Chandrasekhar limit, nothing can stop such a mass from collapsing to a Black Hole.
Just to avoid misunderstandings for other readers: this limit applies to "cold" matter only.
Stars can easily exceed this limit. As long as they can fuse material, radiation pressure prevents them from collapsing.
 
  • #11
neutrons are fermion and also quarks are fermion so how can matter collapse one single point ?
 
  • #12
Where is going this matter ?
 
  • #13
There is no quantum theory of gravity yet, therefore it is unknown if the "center" of a black hole is really a singularity or something else. That does not matter for the description outside.
 
  • #14
PhyHunter said:
neutrons are fermion and also quarks are fermion so how can matter collapse one single point ?

What happens inside a black hole cannot be described by current theory. General relativity and quantum theory conflict. The collapse to a single point results from using G.R. only.
 
  • #15
Code:
..neutrons are fermion and also quarks are fermion so how can matter collapse one single point ?

Nobody really knows the entire story. Both QM and GR show divergences...results approaching infinity...not so good; But the math is believed pretty good inside the horizon until the singularity is approached...until one gets very close.

[It's crudely analogous to Coulomb's law
F = k q1 q2/r2...which also approaches infinity as the radial distance approaches a point. It suggests 'something is wrong' because so far nothing 'infinite' has been experimentally observed.]

At Planck length, about 10-33 cm, a prominent marker in QM, it appears so far that entities we recognize everyday like charge, gravity, space, and time, may cease to exist when compressed so far. [What we observe from the outside of a black hole is representative of the energy-matter at the time of collapse, say the dead star that collapses, not necessarily the final state at the singularity .]

At Planck scale matter-energy gets very energetic due to small distances and times...its loosely referred to a quantum 'foam' at shorter scales...this is way past when degeneracy pressure become significant. The way I think about that is via E =hf = h/λ...so when wavelength λ becomes compressed by gravity [matter is forced into tiny spaces] and approaches a 'point' the wavelength gets really,really small...and energy E gets really really large...

Really funny stuff happens at such high energies which is clearly not well understood.

PS: The same issue of 'collapsing matter' exists with regard to the BIG BANG! Except there we ask how energy-matter can EXPAND from some singularity. So the Big Bang is a singularity in our past from which everything emerged while a BH singularity is a 'point' our future [it's actually a point in time!] where everything 'disappears'. How are these singularities, their associated horizons and our universe related?? So far, nobody knows. Stay tuned!
 

1. Why do stars collapse in on itself?

Stars collapse in on itself due to the force of gravity. As a star ages, it burns through its fuel and the outward pressure from nuclear fusion decreases. This allows the force of gravity to overcome the pressure and cause the star to collapse.

2. What happens during a star's collapse?

During a star's collapse, the outer layers of the star fall inward while the core becomes denser and hotter. This results in a massive release of energy, causing the star to explode in a supernova.

3. How do scientists study the collapse of stars?

Scientists study the collapse of stars through a variety of methods, including observing the light and radiation emitted during a supernova, analyzing the remnants of a collapsed star, and using computer simulations to model the collapse process.

4. Can stars ever stop collapsing?

While stars may stop collapsing temporarily if they reach a stable state, eventually all stars will continue to collapse due to the force of gravity. Even stars that have reached the end of their life cycle and become white dwarfs or neutron stars are still subject to gravitational collapse.

5. What is the ultimate fate of a collapsing star?

The ultimate fate of a collapsing star depends on its initial mass. Smaller stars will eventually become white dwarfs, while larger stars will continue to collapse until they become either neutron stars or black holes.

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