Quantum entanglement and black holes

In summary: In this theoretical situation, if you were to observe the entangled particle outside the black hole, you would not be able to predict or control what happens to the particle inside the black hole. Therefore, no useful information can be transmitted using entanglement, making the black hole event horizon irrelevant in regards to this phenomenon.In summary, using entangled particles to observe what happens inside a black hole is theoretically possible, but it would not violate the axiom that no information can escape a black hole. This is because entanglement does not allow for the transfer of useful information, rendering the event horizon irrelevant in this scenario. This idea has been discussed by scientists
  • #1
bled_eidol
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0
I am a total novice when it comes to quantum mechanics, but I was reading up on the phenomenon of entanglement and a question arose. Theoretically, could someone take two entangled particles and put one in a black hole, using the other to observe what happens to it? Wouldn't this violate the axiom that no information can escape a black hole? Do you have any ideas about what would happen in this theoretical situation? Have scientists ever discussed this idea or am I totally off-base? Hopefully this is not too stupid a question.

Moderators: if this is better suited for the Quantum Mechanics forum, feel free to move it!
 
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  • #2
Entanglement violates a lot of things, so I don't see a problem violating the event horizon.
 
  • #3
Since entanglement doesn't communicate information, the event horizon is a bit irrelevant.
 
  • #4
You can't send information via qauntum entanglement, so you wouldn't be violating anything to do this.

Someone once told me this great entanglement analogy, I'll modify it for this situation. Say you have a pizza that is half Supreme and half Hawaiian. Someone cuts in in half and puts in it two closed boxes, one for you and one for your friend without telling you which half is in which. The two boxes are now 'entangled', each contains a mixed Supreme/Hawaiian state.

Now that you have provisions you decide to go on a journey into a black hole, while your friend stays behind. Once you have passed through the event horizon* your friend gets a bit peckish and opens his pizza box. He has the Hawaiian, and also now knows that you have the Supreme. Does this mean that information has passed out of the event horizon, since an outside observer now knows something new about something inside the Hole? The answer is no, since you couldn't use this to send a message from inside the hole. There is no way for you to send a message that yes you have the Supreme, but they accidentally put anchovies on it.

*It is actually a non-trivial problem that as far as an external observer goes, you will never actually be observed to pass the event horizon in the first place. It actually takes an infinite amount of time for you to do this seen by an outside observer. Notwithstanding this issue, even if they could see you pass through the event horizon, it is still impossible to transmit information via entanglement.
 
  • #5
Thanks for the responses. The pizza analogy was helpful.
 
  • #6
@ Wallace...

WADR, your pizza analogy implies hidden variables and Bell's inequalities do a pretty good job of ruling those out. As such, I don't think a pizza can capture the essence of quantum entanglement. Sadly, I do not have a better analogy to offer...

Though, if an entangled particle fell through an event horizon and then a measurement was made upon it, that measurement would fix one of the variables of the companion particle outside the black hole. But since the information about the measurement made within the event horizon can never be brought outside for correlation, passage though the event horizon effectively destroy the entanglement, which leads to a loss of information.

You also wrote:

*It is actually a non-trivial problem that as far as an external observer goes, you will never actually be observed to pass the event horizon in the first place.

So, a large enough star collapses from within, forming a black hole. As result of all of the information that we can observe from prior to the collapse is present on or above the surface of the event horizon “forever” after the collapse (including all of the information we knew about the interior of the star prior to the collapse – mass, spin and charge). And any additional mass that gets trapped appears to take forever to fall into the back hole, at least from an outside observer’s perspective. Why can't the perspective from the mass falling through the event horizon be ignored (since there is no way to know if it really passed all the way becasue information can’t pass back out telling us that it did)? If so, then can we say that mass does not fall through the event horizon at all but rather falls onto the surface of the event horizon? As such, no information is ever lost, it’s just red-shifted until the red-shift of surrounding space becomes greater; at which point the information is radiated back into space via Hawking... This also would make the statement that "black hole entropy is proportional to surface areas instead of volume," obvious.

Ps. @ cesiumfrog

Since entanglement doesn't communicate information, the event horizon is a bit irrelevant.

WADR as well, quantum entanglement most certainly does communicate information. It simple does not do it in any useful way that is faster than the speed of light.
 
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  • #7
bled_eidol said:
Theoretically, could someone take two entangled particles and put one in a black hole, using the other to observe what happens to it?
The black hole is irrelevant -- you can't use one to 'observe' the other under any circumstances.
 
  • #8
Hurkyl said:
The black hole is irrelevant -- you can't use one to 'observe' the other under any circumstances.

Again, WADR, you certainly can use one to observe the other as long as the speed of the "act of observing" does not violate the speed of light. And since getting information out from within an event horizon would clearly require FTL travel, it seems that the black hole is relevant.
 
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  • #9
The pizza thing is obviously a simple analogy, designed only to demonstrate the key misunderstood point about quantum entanglement, which is that you cannot transfer information using entangled particles. This has already been pointed out by myself, cesiumfrog and Hurkyl. I agree with Hurkyl, the black hole thing is really a red herring in the discussion, since you can't pass information via entanglement in any case, so the black hole event horizon question is moot.

Entanglement allows you to know something about a particle an an arbitrary distance from you in an instant, however this is not information transfer, since you can't send or receive a message via this process, that is the crucial point.
 
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  • #10
Wallace said:
The pizza thing is obviously a simple analogy, designed only to demonstrate the key misunderstood point about quantum entanglement, which is that you cannot transfer information using entangled particles. This has already been pointed out by myself, cesiumfrog and Hurkyl. I agree with Hurkyl, the black hole thing is really a red herring in the discussion, since you can't pass information via entanglement in any case, so the black hole event horizon question is moot.

Entanglement allows you to know something about a particle an an arbitrary distance from you in an instant, however this is not information transfer, since you can't send or receive a message via this process, that is the crucial point.

And as I have pointed out to you, Hurkyl and cesiumfrog, you all seem to have a common misunderstanding about what entanglement is... Entanglement allows you to know that an entangled partner knew something about its partner particle an arbitrary distance from one another in an instant. However, you will not be able to show that this occurred in a manner that violates the speed of light.

If entanglement did not carry information and/or if entanglement did not transfer information, there would be no need of such a concept QM. The fact is that entanglement does carry information and does transmit information, it just does it in a way that forces us to "observe" this information transfer at slower than light speed.
 
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  • #11
Ynaught? said:
And as I have pointed out to you, Hurkyl and cesiumfrog, you all seem to have a common misunderstanding about what entanglement is.
lol.
 
  • #12
I'm not sure if I like the pizza analogy, and here is why:

1. It implies that the two particles are only fragments (halves) of a single particle, which is not the case.

2. It implies that the two particles had been observed originally and then concealed (the person who cut the two pizza halves observed them in order to separate them according to style and place them in the boxes to conceal their identity). This is of course not the way entangled particles work. The observation does not take place until after they are separated.
 
  • #13
Could the information be teleported out by entanglement?
 
  • #14
And I think the pizza is both hawaiian and supreme until the box is opened.
 
  • #15
It was my understanding that Quantum Entanglement had not been conclusively shown to contain or not contain hidden variables. Is this incorrect?
 
  • #16
lsdwyrm said:
And I think the pizza is both hawaiian and supreme until the box is opened.

Only if there's a cat in there with it.
 
  • #17
Lol!
 

1. What is quantum entanglement?

Quantum entanglement is a phenomenon in which two or more particles become linked together in such a way that the state of one particle is dependent on the state of the other, regardless of the distance between them. This means that any changes made to one particle will affect the other, even if they are separated by vast distances.

2. How does quantum entanglement relate to black holes?

Recent research has suggested that quantum entanglement may play a role in understanding the behavior of black holes. It is believed that black holes may be able to entangle particles with each other, which could help explain how information is preserved within a black hole.

3. Can quantum entanglement be used for communication?

No, quantum entanglement cannot be used for communication. While changes in one particle will affect its entangled partner, this does not allow for the transfer of information or messages between particles. The effects of quantum entanglement are random and cannot be controlled for communication purposes.

4. How does quantum entanglement challenge our understanding of space and time?

Quantum entanglement challenges our understanding of space and time because it suggests that particles can be connected and influence each other instantaneously, regardless of distance. This goes against the theory of relativity, which states that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. It also raises questions about the nature of space and whether it is continuous or discrete.

5. Is there any practical application for quantum entanglement and black holes?

While there are currently no practical applications for quantum entanglement and black holes, research in this area could potentially lead to breakthroughs in quantum computing and our understanding of the fundamental laws of the universe. It may also have implications for future technologies such as quantum teleportation and advanced communication systems.

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