Dook said:
Maybe all particles (EMR and matter) are converted to something else that somehow escape the black hole?
In 1974, Professor Hawking had an idea. He said black holes eventually transmit information about all the matter they swallow into radiation to be spewed out of the black hole. Hawking predicted that a black hole radiates thermally like a hot coal, with a temperature inversely proportional to its mass. For a solar-mass black hole, the temperature is around a millionth of a degree Kelvin - negligible. A black hole of 10
12 Kelvins though, is hot enough to emit both massless, and massive particles, such as photons, electrons, and positrons. The thermal energy and hot coal were only analogies, what really happens is that the black hole “evaporates”, and disappears when all of the energy is converted and spewed to, now named in his honor, Hawking radiation. Previously, according to classical general relativity, neither matter nor information could flow from the interior of a black hole to an outside observer, and quantum mechanics though, allows matter and energy to radiate from black holes. Stephen Hawking was in the news in July 2004 for presenting a new theory on the quantum nature of black holes which goes against his own long-held belief about their behavior.
Because the emission of Hawking radiation is energy, the mass of the hole decreases the longer it lives, unless its being fed. As it shrinks, it gets steadily hotter, it sends out increasing amounts of Hawking radiation, emitting increasingly energetic particles and shrinking faster and faster. When it shrivels up to a mass of about 10
6 kilograms, the game’s up: within a second, it explodes with about the energy of a million-megaton nuclear bomb. The total time for a black hole to evaporate away is proportional to the cube of its initial mass. For a solar-mass sized-hole, the lifetime is an unobservably long 10
64 years. For a 10
12 kilogram one, it is about 10
10 years - about the estimated present age of the universe.