Wizardsblade said:
Could you theoreticaly use lasers to creat a standing waves capable of creating many consecutive balck holes?
I very much doubt it. For one thing, there is a critical field intensity at which your laser beams would start to create particles, the Schwinger critical field. So if you try to do the job with one laser, it would have to be very large physically to keep the beam intensity below this limit.
In addition, I strongly suspect that the resulting system would be unstable in the sense that as soon as one black hole started to form, it would absorb all the energy.
Of course this is rather speculative, I haven't worked out any of the details (but the whole scenario is pretty unlikely).
I think you'd have much better luck with about 10^31 or so megajoule lasers (if they were designed to produce very short, femtosecond pulses, otherwise you'll need more lasers) all aimed at the same spot within a half-micron precision :-).
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Even with this approach (a Very large number of focused pulsed lasers) you still might have problems with the Schwinger critical field being exceeded and the resulting particle creation "bleeding" too much energy away from the beam before the black hole density at the center could be reached. I have no clue how to go about calculating this effect, unfortunately.
I don't seem to have any good references for the Schwinger field, which is of course a quantum phenomenon rather than a GR phenomenon. The abstract below at least talks about proposals to exceed it.
http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=PRLTAO000091000008085001000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=yes