tensor33 said:
Why is it that the smaller a black hole is, the more Hawking radiation it emits? It seems counterintuitive to me. I would think that a larger black hole with a larger surface area would trap more antiparticles from virtual particle antiparticle pairs, hence emitting more Hawking radiation.
A quick glance here shows that the temperature scales inversely with the Schwarzschild radius:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawking_radiation#Emission_process
That is,
T_H \propto {1 \over R_s}
Total luminosity scales as the fourth power of temperature times the second power of the radius:
L \propto R^2T^4
Therefore, the luminosity of a black hole scales with the inverse square of the radius:
L_H \propto {1 \over R_s^2}
So yes, the smaller a black hole is, the brighter it is. And yes, this is precisely because the smaller a black hole is, the stronger its surface gravity. To understand this, remember the field theory picture of Hawking radiation:
The field theory picture is that all throughout the vacuum, there are particle/anti-particle pairs popping into existence and rapidly annihilating with one another. Throughout most of the universe, these zero-point field fluctuations don't have any effect. However, very near a black hole, it is possible for one of the two particles to be sucked into the black hole, while the other escapes. The one that is sucked into the black hole ends up subtracting from the black hole's mass, while the one that escapes becomes Hawking radiation.
How efficient this process is depends entirely upon the gravity gradient at the horizon: if the gradient is low, then most of the time both particles in the pair will experience the same forces, and either both fall in or both escape, with no net effect either way. But if the surface gravity is high, then the closer of the two particles will be pulled towards the black hole that much more strongly than the other, leading to that much higher of a probability that only one will escape.
In the end, the temperature of the black hole is simply given by its surface gravity:
T_H = {\kappa \over 2\pi}
(here \kappa is the surface gravity)