yogi said:
I will take issue with the Planck mass/size limitations. The whole idea of fundamental units al la Planck is nothing but cosmological numerology. There are other factors that can be combined to yield different values for a unit of mass such as the electron charge and the like. Why attach any significance to the Planck mass - why not use the electon mass as a fundamental entity if you must come up with non scientific deductions - in which case the black hole radius would be on the order of 10-57 meters
It's more than numerology. The Planck length is a fundamental unit in nature. Why? Because it is impossible to quantify anything smaller, and this plays a vital role in quantum physics. Consider this:
"There is only one truly fundamental length in nature a length free of all reference to the dimensions and rate of revolution of the planet on which we happen to live, free of any appeal to the complex properties of any solid or gas: free of every reference to the mysterious properties of any elementary particle: what we call today the Planck length,
L=(hG/C^3)1/2= 1.6X10^-33 cm
And what we identify with the characteristic scale of quantum fluctuations in the geometry of space".
- John A Wheeler "At Home in the Universe" p169
And here is a paper that further explains things:
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/gr-qc/0201030
Uncertainty in Measurements of Distance
Authors: John C. Baez, S. Jay Olson
And, as suspected, a Planck mass black hole occupies a Planck volume
http://zebu.uoregon.edu/~js/glossary/planck_time.html
"Contained within a Planck volume is a Planck mass (hc/G)1/2, roughly 10-5 g. An object of such mass would be a quantum black hole, with an event horizon close to both its own Compton length (distance over which a particle is quantum mechanically "fuzzy") and the size of the cosmic horizon at the Planck time."
- Encyclopedia Britannica