Quantum mechanics and black holes

In summary: So the more mass a black hole has, the more energy it will need to resist the collapse. And the more energy a black hole has, the more it will pull in from the surrounding universe. So the more mass a black hole has, the more it will grow. Eventually the black hole will reach a point where the mass is so large that the energy it has to resist the collapse is infinite. At that point, the black hole will collapse into a singularity. And at the singularity, the mass and energy will be infinite. (I really don't understand how mathematicians calculate the black hole to have these infinite values like
  • #1
mikef20000
1
0
Does it make sense to try to combine quantum mechanics with relativity when trying to understand black holes when the mass of the black hole is so huge?

In nuclear physics people use something called the liquid drop theory to model a heavy nucleus using classical physics not quantum mechanics because the nucleus is big enough that this approximation is reasonable.

Michael Fothergill
 
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  • #2
as well, one can perfectly use Newtonian mechanics by considering the BH as a big massive sphere. It just depends what you want to do...
However to gain knowledge on the BH itself and its physics one has to go beyond such simplifications.. just like for nuclei (one has to do particle physics).
 
  • #3
mikef20000 said:
Does it make sense to try to combine quantum mechanics with relativity when trying to understand black holes when the mass of the black hole is so huge?

Most physicists think think that quantum mechanics and general relativity must be combined deep inside a black hole, but no one knows how to do this in usable way.
 
  • #4
mikef20000 said:
Does it make sense to try to combine quantum mechanics with relativity when trying to understand black holes when the mass of the black hole is so huge?

It depends what part of the black hole you want to understand. Some things you can model without quantum mechanics, some things you can even model without much general relativity. Other things you can't.

In nuclear physics people use something called the liquid drop theory to model a heavy nucleus using classical physics not quantum mechanics because the nucleus is big enough that this approximation is reasonable.

"Liquid drop" is semi-classical which means that you sort of try to sweep the quantum parts under the rug.

And for things outside the black hole there is something called the membrane paradigm which let's you think about the situation using more or less classical physics.
 
  • #5
I'm no physicist, but I had always guessed that material in the black hole was normal material but the atoms are completely squashed to the point electrons/protons etc are physically touching.

(I really don’t understand how mathematicians calculate the black hole to have these infinite values like infinite gravity at the centre.)
 
  • #6
Yes because time stops at the point of the singularity the mass of a black hole does not exist at where the star collapsed. Therefore there is a worm hole that leads to the singularity. Quontum machanics predicts that the worm hole will be of an infinitly small size 1/infinity and matter will be squeezed to a size of 1/intinity which means that even elcotrons will be crushed
This leads to other questions. Since the singularity has no time or space where does it exist? Is it everywhere in the universe at the same time? (bad word time as time does not exist for a singularity)! Do all worm holes lead to the same singularity? If so will all the matter in the universe end up in the sigularity and would this lead to another big bang?
 
  • #7
seb7 said:
I'm no physicist, but I had always guessed that material in the black hole was normal material but the atoms are completely squashed to the point electrons/protons etc are physically touching.

Electrons are point particles and protons are made of point particles so it doesn't make sense to talk about them "physically touching". There is something in quantum mechanics called the Pauli exclusion principle which says that some types of particles can't have the same energy state at the same time. Electrons and protons obey the exclusion principle. Photons do not. The Pauli exclusion principle is why you can build stuff out of protons and electrons but not light. If you have a floor made of protons and electrons, the Pauli exclusion principle will keep you from falling through it. Whereas if you have a floor made of light, it won't.

The trouble with the Pauli exclusion principle is that if you have enough gravity, it will overwhelm it. It's a consequence of special relativity. To put it crudely, if you have a chair and then you try to compress it, the atoms will try to vibrate faster. Once the atoms in a block of matter start to vibrate at close to the speed of light, they can't vibrate and faster, and so if you press on something hard enough, the atoms will be unable to vibrate fast enough to resist the pressure and resist the pressure that you are putting on it.

(I really don’t understand how mathematicians calculate the black hole to have these infinite values like infinite gravity at the centre.)

The problem is that once you have enough matter in a black hole, nothing can stop the collapse to infinite density. In order to resist the collapse, you need energy. Energy is equivalent to mass (E=mc^2) and mass has gravity. What happens in a black hole is that the energy that you need to stop things from getting crushed creates enough gravity to crush things even more.

So what happens is that things get crushed to infinity because there is nothing to stop it using known theories. There may be some unknown theory that will stop it, but it's hard to guess what that might be since we don't have observations to create theories.
 
  • #8
kcalco said:
Yes because time stops at the point of the singularity the mass of a black hole does not exist at where the star collapsed. Therefore there is a worm hole that leads to the singularity. Quontum machanics predicts that the worm hole will be of an infinitly small size 1/infinity and matter will be squeezed to a size of 1/intinity which means that even elcotrons will be crushed

This is wrong. Sometimes you just have to say "I don't know."

Once you get to black hole densities and you put in numbers into our current theories to ask what happens, the theories spit out the answer "I don't know."
 
  • #9
It is likely that any theory predicting an infinite anything is incomplete. The universe abhors infinities.
 
  • #10
If time slows and stops from the reference point of the object being sucked in, then wouldn't nothing happen?
 
  • #11
twofish-quant said:
This is wrong. Sometimes you just have to say "I don't know."

Once you get to black hole densities and you put in numbers into our current theories to ask what happens, the theories spit out the answer "I don't know."

I will admit it may not be right but its better than an i don't know. Before a theory can be conceived it has to be thought and evaluated and re-though. So let an idea run until it can be disproved.
 
  • #12
dizam said:
If time slows and stops from the reference point of the object being sucked in, then wouldn't nothing happen?

As the universe is still expanding and time stops for the singularity then the distance between them will be increaseing. Time does not stop at the event horizon.
 
  • #13
Chronos said:
It is likely that any theory predicting an infinite anything is incomplete. The universe abhors infinities.

Theorist abhor infinities as they can't at the moment accept them. The universe has no knoledge of infinity, probably does not remember Einstine.
 
  • #14
twofish-quant said:
Electrons are point particles and protons are made of point particles so it doesn't make sense to talk about them "physically touching". There is something in quantum mechanics called the Pauli exclusion principle which says that some types of particles can't have the same energy state at the same time. Electrons and protons obey the exclusion principle. Photons do not. The Pauli exclusion principle is why you can build stuff out of protons and electrons but not light. If you have a floor made of protons and electrons, the Pauli exclusion principle will keep you from falling through it. Whereas if you have a floor made of light, it won't.

The trouble with the Pauli exclusion principle is that if you have enough gravity, it will overwhelm it. It's a consequence of special relativity. To put it crudely, if you have a chair and then you try to compress it, the atoms will try to vibrate faster. Once the atoms in a block of matter start to vibrate at close to the speed of light, they can't vibrate and faster, and so if you press on something hard enough, the atoms will be unable to vibrate fast enough to resist the pressure and resist the pressure that you are putting on it.



The problem is that once you have enough matter in a black hole, nothing can stop the collapse to infinite density. In order to resist the collapse, you need energy. Energy is equivalent to mass (E=mc^2) and mass has gravity. What happens in a black hole is that the energy that you need to stop things from getting crushed creates enough gravity to crush things even more.

So what happens is that things get crushed to infinity because there is nothing to stop it using known theories. There may be some unknown theory that will stop it, but it's hard to guess what that might be since we don't have observations to create theories.

Matter = energy. I believe that a singularity is made of just energy compressed infinitly.
 
  • #15
I got a few questions .

Since the time breaks down inside the bh , that could mean that at the moment of the creation of the same bh inside of it have already merged with all the other bhs and eated the whole universe. Right?

If soo then inside all the bhs of this universe resides a copy of this universe in mass?.

If soo then the bhs would be a likely face of a duplicating mechanism?. in terms of mass.

It makes some sense as the universe is slowly accelerating on the expansion.
At least in my mind .
 
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  • #16
The whole thing bows down to what you are describing within the black hole. If you are discussing mass on the large scale of the black hole, classical gravity is a good hook. Here physicists are describing the forces of nature which deals with force carrying particles with zero mass or mass with range with just about a few eV/c^2, which other branch of physics you think deals exclusively with such small scales? That's why they try to combine quantum Physics with General relativity. The standard has combined the three forces with the exception of gravity. We know that gravity is brought on by mass. To go back to before Planck's time (which is where is supposed gravity combined with the other three forces), one has to go beyond the standard model. Quantum Gravity is the best candidate to date.
 
  • #17
dizam said:
If time slows and stops from the reference point of the object being sucked in, then wouldn't nothing happen?

"Time stops in the BH" is one of the popular misconceptions.
No, it does not stop.
It stops in a coordinate system of a distant observer.
Freely falling observer reaches the singularity in finite time
 
  • #18
twofish-quant said:
Electrons are point particles and protons are made of point particles so it doesn't make sense to talk about them "physically touching". There is something in quantum mechanics called the Pauli exclusion principle which says that some types of particles can't have the same energy state at the same time. Electrons and protons obey the exclusion principle. Photons do not. The Pauli exclusion principle is why you can build stuff out of protons and electrons but not light. If you have a floor made of protons and electrons, the Pauli exclusion principle will keep you from falling through it. Whereas if you have a floor made of light, it won't.

The trouble with the Pauli exclusion principle is that if you have enough gravity, it will overwhelm it. It's a consequence of special relativity. To put it crudely, if you have a chair and then you try to compress it, the atoms will try to vibrate faster. Once the atoms in a block of matter start to vibrate at close to the speed of light, they can't vibrate and faster, and so if you press on something hard enough, the atoms will be unable to vibrate fast enough to resist the pressure and resist the pressure that you are putting on it.



The problem is that once you have enough matter in a black hole, nothing can stop the collapse to infinite density. In order to resist the collapse, you need energy. Energy is equivalent to mass (E=mc^2) and mass has gravity. What happens in a black hole is that the energy that you need to stop things from getting crushed creates enough gravity to crush things even more.

So what happens is that things get crushed to infinity because there is nothing to stop it using known theories. There may be some unknown theory that will stop it, but it's hard to guess what that might be since we don't have observations to create theories.

Hey, we will have to be careful how we present things here. you will have to understand there are people on this forum who take thing as we write them. Things don't get crushed to infinity. Saying this is illogically irrelevant. infinity has two subsets, large and small and we will have to point that out. How you put it is "MATTER GET COMPRESSED TO INFINITE DENSITY". This is simply saying since the mass is large, we see from our secondary school formula for density (D=M/V) that if the volume shrinks toward zero, the density becomes infinite. However, the volume here depends on the radius of the BH(which we assume is a sphere). Knowing the volume of a sphere is given by V=4/3pi r^3, playing with our equations a little we get the density D=3M/4pi r^3. Here now its clear the we are actually saying as the radius goes to 0, the density becomes infinite.
 
  • #19
Abbas Sherif said:
Knowing the volume of a sphere is given by V=4/3pi r^3

Inside a black hole, it's not. I don't think a black hole has a well defined volume.
 
  • #20
Abbas Sherif said:
Hey, we will have to be careful how we present things here. you will have to understand there are people on this forum who take thing as we write them. Things don't get crushed to infinity. Saying this is illogically irrelevant. infinity has two subsets, large and small and we will have to point that out. How you put it is "MATTER GET COMPRESSED TO INFINITE DENSITY". This is simply saying since the mass is large, we see from our secondary school formula for density (D=M/V) that if the volume shrinks toward zero, the density becomes infinite. However, the volume here depends on the radius of the BH(which we assume is a sphere). Knowing the volume of a sphere is given by V=4/3pi r^3, playing with our equations a little we get the density D=3M/4pi r^3. Here now its clear the we are actually saying as the radius goes to 0, the density becomes infinite.

No, as said before, matter crosses the horizon in a finite proper time. Yes, the volume of the BH is not well defined (you can't use a formula for a volume of a sphere because it is applicable to the euclidean space only). But even if we ignore this fact, the position of the event horizon is irrelevant: matter is compressed to extremely high densities DEEP INSIDE THE BLACK HOLE.
 
  • #21
Dmitry67 said:
No, as said before, matter crosses the horizon in a finite proper time. Yes, the volume of the BH is not well defined (you can't use a formula for a volume of a sphere because it is applicable to the euclidean space only). But even if we ignore this fact, the position of the event horizon is irrelevant: matter is compressed to extremely high densities DEEP INSIDE THE BLACK HOLE.
I introduce this to explain volume compression where we see how density goes infinite. Yes its true this is used in 3 dimensional euclidean space. We can equally argue that if we assume that the black hole is a spherical schwardzchild black hole,since the volume in question is simply the internal space (at least that what I meant), that we can consider the BH 3 dimensional and ignore time since the true effect on time is with the compression itself,time in which case is more of an after effect. But basically you are right and the last point to stressed is exactly the point I was making and I think I got it through right.
 
  • #22
It appears we are all on the same page now. An external observer does not see anything inside the event horizon. The infalling observer sees time and space cease to exist as he/she approaches the singularity. We observe event horizons, not singularities.
 
  • #23
Chronos said:
We observe event horizons, not singularities.

... unless there are nakes singularities (super-extreme black holes)
 
  • #24
Chronos said:
It appears we are all on the same page now. An external observer does not see anything inside the event horizon. The infalling observer sees time and space cease to exist as he/she approaches the singularity. We observe event horizons, not singularities.
No. It's is the external observer that views time to stop for an infalling observer (given he has already crossed the event horizon). This is do simply to the fact that light leaving the BH never reaches the external observer but hovers over the event horizon. However, time is perfectly defined to the infalling observer as registered on his clock.
 
  • #25
Dmitry67 said:
... unless there are nakes singularities (super-extreme black holes)

Naked singularities don't necessarily have to be extreme BHs. They are just BH with missing event horizons which could be associated with a BH with a rotating singularity.
 
  • #26
Abbas Sherif said:
No. It's is the external observer that views time to stop for an infalling observer (given he has already crossed the event horizon). This is do simply to the fact that light leaving the BH never reaches the external observer but hovers over the event horizon. However, time is perfectly defined to the infalling observer as registered on his clock.

From the point of the external observer it takes the infalling observer an infinite amount of time to cross the event horizon - with the light from closer to the EH becoming redshifted to infinity. From the point of the infalling observer they cross the event horizon in a relativistic finite timeframe.

Both reference points are valid and true, the infalling observer does not fall in - at least not to the external observers frame of reference. (It is not just the image that does not fall in, but the infalling observer does not - at least not in a finite time to an external observer.)

Essentially this is the mapping of a finite proper time to an infinite observer co-ordinate time, both frames of reference are true and accurate at anyone time - either as the infalling object or the external observer.

This is at least how I understand it.
 

What is quantum mechanics?

Quantum mechanics is a branch of physics that describes the behavior of particles at a subatomic level. It explains how particles behave and interact with each other through wave-like properties.

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 collapses in on itself.

How does quantum mechanics relate to black holes?

Quantum mechanics plays a key role in understanding the behavior of particles in and around black holes. It helps explain phenomena such as Hawking radiation, which is the gradual loss of energy and mass by a black hole.

What is the relationship between quantum mechanics and the event horizon of a black hole?

The event horizon of a black hole is the point of no return, where the gravitational pull is so strong that not even light can escape. Quantum mechanics helps us understand the behavior of particles at this boundary and how they may interact with the black hole.

Can quantum mechanics be used to explain the paradox of information loss in black holes?

The paradox of information loss in black holes refers to the idea that information about particles that fall into a black hole could be lost forever. While quantum mechanics has been used to suggest potential solutions to this paradox, it is still an ongoing topic of research and debate among scientists.

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