Can a maximal charged black hole have "flavor" or weak hair?

In summary, a maximal charged black hole can't have "flavor" or weak charge, and if electron neutrinos collide with it, electron neutrinos are more likely to be emitted as Hawking radiation than muon neutrinos.
  • #1
Larry Pendarvis
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Consider a Maximal (negatively) charged black hole. Can it have "flavor" or weak charge?
Suppose a muon collided with that hole. Would an electron be emitted?
What if electron neutrinos collided with that black hole; would electron neutrinos more likely be emitted as Hawking Radiation (assuming that happens at all) than muon neutrinos?
 
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  • #2
Larry Pendarvis said:
Consider a Maximal (negatively) charged black hole.

Is there any particular reason why you specified a maximal (i.e., charge = mass) hole? The answer to your question would be the same for any charged hole.

Larry Pendarvis said:
Can it have "flavor" or weak charge?

I don't think so. The only "hair" a black hole can have is associated with conserved charges/currents, and AFAIK there are no nonzero conserved charges/currents associated with the weak interaction.
 
  • #3
PeterDonis said:
Is there any particular reason why you specified a maximal (i.e., charge = mass) hole? The answer to your question would be the same for any charged hole.
I specified a maximal charged black hole because of where I am headed with the muon colliding with it. That makes the (EM) charge too much and something got to give. And if "flavor" or Weak Charge is not conserved at the horizon, then muons will be converted to electrons.
If it is believed that the Coulomb repulsion will be too great for the muon to be absorbed unless the relativistic energy is enormous, then that seems to be a way to get a (charged) observation apparatus into close orbit with no fear of reaching the horizon.
 
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  • #4
Larry Pendarvis said:
I specified a maximal charged black hole because of where I am headed with the muon colliding with it. That makes the (EM) charge too much and something got to give.

No, it doesn't. As you note later in your post, there will be Coulomb repulsion between the muon and the hole; to overcome that and get the muon to cross the horizon, energy must be added to the system. The result is that the hole's mass must increase by at least enough to keep the hole at or below the maximal threshold.

Larry Pendarvis said:
if "flavor" or Weak Charge is not conserved at the horizon

The conservation or non-conservation doesn't happen "at the horizon". The black hole's "hair" or lack thereof is not a property of the horizon; it's a property of the spacetime as a whole.

Larry Pendarvis said:
muons will be converted to electrons.

That happens to muons anyway; there's nothing special about the horizon in this respect.

The final question in your OP is a better way of approaching what I think you're getting at:

Larry Pendarvis said:
What if electron neutrinos collided with that black hole; would electron neutrinos more likely be emitted as Hawking Radiation (assuming that happens at all) than muon neutrinos?

I think the answer to this is no; but I don't know if anyone has actually done the analysis of Hawking radiation for this case (where multiple quantum fields are assumed to be present).

Larry Pendarvis said:
that seems to be a way to get a (charged) observation apparatus into close orbit with no fear of reaching the horizon.

It won't be an "orbit" in the usual sense, because the apparatus won't be in free fall; it will require rocket thrust to maintain its trajectory.
 
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  • #5
PeterDonis said:
It won't be an "orbit" in the usual sense, because the apparatus won't be in free fall; it will require rocket thrust to maintain its trajectory.
And without the rocket thrust, what will happen to this highly charged apparatus?
 
  • #6
Larry Pendarvis said:
without the rocket thrust, what will happen to this highly charged apparatus?

It will fly away from the hole because of electromagnetic repulsion.
 
  • #7
PeterDonis said:
It will fly away from the hole because of electromagnetic repulsion.
So we would have a bouncy apparatus - we can throw it harder and harder to get as close as we like to the horizon, without fear of losing it (except to tidal forces if the BH is small enough). Or just use less charge on it, to get closer before the bounce. Considering this as a kind of Mirror, it can be seen that charged radiation from such a BH will have extremely high velocity at a distance.

But surely at some distance it can orbit.
 
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  • #8
PeterDonis said:
That happens to muons anyway; there's nothing special about the horizon in this respect.
Has that been observed already? I mean a neutrinoless conversion?
http://mu2e.fnal.gov/

For that matter, a maximal (positively) charged black hole (or a very small black hole) could demonstrate proton conversion to a positron or muon in the same way. THAT has not been observed yet.

Since we have a problem with the Coulomb repulsion, we could use a maximal rotating black hole and toss in mass off-center (or mass with high angular momentum) to make it briefly super-maximal, in order to get radiation. No bounce, but the protons convert ("decay").
 
  • #9
Larry Pendarvis said:
So we would have a bouncy apparatus - we can throw it harder and harder to get as close as we like to the horizon, without fear of losing it

But there's a limit to how hard you can throw it without it falling in; if you throw it hard enough, it won't bounce before it reaches the horizon.

Larry Pendarvis said:
it can be seen that charged radiation from such a BH will have extremely high velocity at a distance.

What charged radiation are you talking about? Are you talking about Hawking radiation?

Larry Pendarvis said:
surely at some distance it can orbit.

If you mean, at some distance the hole's gravity can counteract the repulsion of the charge, no. Both forces decrease as the inverse square of the distance, so the ratio between them stays the same.

Larry Pendarvis said:
Has that been observed already? I mean a neutrinoless conversion?

I didn't say the conversion was neutrinoless. I was talking about the ordinary muon decay reaction. That will happen to muons that fall into a black hole, just as it happens to muons anywhere else.

Larry Pendarvis said:
a maximal (positively) charged black hole (or a very small black hole) could demonstrate proton conversion to a positron or muon in the same way

I don't understand what you are talking about with this. Particles that fall into a black hole don't get "converted" to anything. If you are talking about Hawking radiation, that is not a "conversion" of particles that fall in; it happens even if the black hole is in vacuum, with nothing falling in at all.

Larry Pendarvis said:
we could use a maximal rotating black hole and toss in mass off-center (or mass with high angular momentum) to make it briefly super-maximal

This won't work. The hole's mass will always end up increasing by enough to compensate for the increase in angular momentum and keep the hole at or below the maximal threshold.

Larry Pendarvis said:
in order to get radiation.

I don't understand this either. Do you think that only super-maximal holes emit Hawking radiation? That's not the case.

Larry Pendarvis said:
No bounce, but the protons convert ("decay").

Same comment here as above; I don't understand where you're getting this from. You're going to need to give some references, or this thread will be closed.
 
  • #10
PeterDonis said:
You're going to need to give some references, or this thread will be closed.
There is this from Bekenstein:
http://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0107045.pdf
"This 'no hair principle' was overturned in the 1990’s with the appearance of a number of new black hole parameters and properties: skyrmion number, nonabelian magnetic monopole, color, etc."
Sorry it's not a proper Journal, let me browse some more.
This thread does seem to be getting off-topic; I'll try to keep it focused and/or start another topic.
 
  • #11
"No bounce, but the protons convert ('decay')."
PeterDonis said:
I don't understand where you're getting this from.
I am using the word "convert" in the following sense:
If you put hydrogen atoms into the black hole, you are more likely to get electrons and positrons out as Hawking radiation, than protons. If you put a LOT of matter into a small black hole, you will get out a lot of positrons but few protons.
(This also means that ordinary matter, including dark matter, will be "converted" to neutrinos and photons - and to particles and their anti-particles (mostly electrons and positrons) with equal probability. This would seem to be the future makeup of the universe... unless Hawking radiation is largely dark matter.)
 
  • #12
Larry Pendarvis said:
"This 'no hair principle' was overturned in the 1990’s with the appearance of a number of new black hole parameters and properties: skyrmion number, nonabelian magnetic monopole, color, etc."

Hm, interesting; it would have been nice if he had given specific references at that point, but he might have considered this statement too commonplace to need references. Which is perfectly understandable for him, as one of the world's leading experts in the field, but doesn't help us very much. :eek:

Googling did turn up some papers on arxiv about black holes with "hair" of the types he lists--skyrmion hair, monopole hair, and Yang-Mills hair (which is what "color" presumably refers to--but both the weak and strong interactions are mediated by Yang-Mills fields, so this kind of hair could be ). So it does appear that this has been studied. From a quick skim of the papers, though, I can't tell whether, for example, the Yang-Mills hair models would help to answer the questions in your OP.

Larry Pendarvis said:
Sorry it's not a proper Journal

In this case that's not an issue; Bekenstein is a reputable source.
 
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  • #13
Larry Pendarvis said:
If you put hydrogen atoms into the black hole, you are more likely to get electrons and positrons out as Hawking radiation, than protons. If you put in a LOT of matter, you will get out a lot of positrons but few protons.

You're more likely to get photons out than anything else, since they're massless. Neutrinos would be next, since, although they are believed to have mass, their masses are extremely small. Electrons and positrons, the next lightest known particles, would be much less likely to be emitted because of their much larger mass. At least, this would be the case for any black hole of stellar mass or larger, since the Hawking temperature is so low.

(Actually, any such hole in our current universe has a Hawking temperature much lower than the temperature of the CMBR, so it wouldn't actually be losing any mass via Hawking radiation; it would be gaining mass on net from the CMBR even if nothing else ever fell in. So none of the above will happen to any actual black hole in our universe for a very long time.)

So what you say is correct, but I'm not sure "conversion" is a good word to use, because it implies that the hydrogen atoms falling into the hole somehow turn into photons, etc. by some process involving those specific hydrogen atoms. On our current understanding of Hawking radiation, that's not the case; the energy for the Hawking radiation comes from the spacetime curvature of the hole, and it will happen even if nothing at all is falling in. It is true, though, that the overall process of, say, forming a black hole from a star made of a lot of atoms, and then eventually having that hole evaporate into mostly photons, grossly violates conservation of baryon number, lepton number, etc.--anything that isn't a type of "hair". (Note that even the additional kinds of "hair" that Bekenstein mentions won't mean that baryon number or lepton number are conserved in a black hole.)
 
  • #14
PeterDonis said:
You're more likely to get photons out than anything else, since they're massless. Neutrinos would be next, since, although they are believed to have mass, their masses are extremely small. Electrons and positrons, the next lightest known particles, would be much less likely to be emitted because of their much larger mass.
Yes, and even if positrons and electrons are emitted in equal numbers they will eventually annihilate. So rest mass seems to be doomed in the far future.
But if you put just protons into a black hole, at some point you are going to get positrons out. As it radiates off its mass, its charge becomes more and more important. If it becomes maximal before it emits positrons, it will stop radiating uncharged particles altogether until a positron is emitted.
 
  • #15
PeterDonis said:
I'm not sure "conversion" is a good word to use, because it implies that the hydrogen atoms falling into the hole somehow turn into photons, etc. by some process involving those specific hydrogen atoms. On our current understanding of Hawking radiation, that's not the case; the energy for the Hawking radiation comes from the spacetime curvature of the hole, and it will happen even if nothing at all is falling in.
I am imagining turning a fire hose onto a small black hole that is vigorously trying to evaporate, putting in just enough mass to keep its mass steady. Eventually you will be putting in a lot more mass than the BH had when you started, and you will have gotten out just as much mass-energy. So it is like a trashmasher chewing up hair. You could in principle run all the mass in the entire current universe through that little BH. That looks a lot like "conversion". This seems to put a new face on the question of where does the information go. The entropy of the black hole does not change, yet a lot of information is apparently being destroyed - since, as you say, the energy for the Hawking radiation comes from the spacetime curvature of the hole, and it will happen even if nothing at all is falling in... thus it has no correlation with what is fueling the BH.
But "In 2004 Hawking himself conceded a bet he had made, agreeing that black hole evaporation does in fact preserve information." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole_information_paradox
Yet how can that tiny BH contain so much information? So little entropy.
 
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  • #16
PeterDonis said:
The conservation or non-conservation doesn't happen "at the horizon". The black hole's "hair" or lack thereof is not a property of the horizon; it's a property of the spacetime as a whole
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2011/aug/15/information-paradox-simplified
"Braunstein and Patra say that the event horizon is purely quantum mechanical in nature, with bits of quantum 'Hilbert' space tunnelling through the barrier. The theorists find that even such a heavily simplified tunnelling model can reconstruct the spectrum of radiation that is thought to emanate from black holes. This is unlike Hawking's pair-creation model, which leads to the information loss"
 
  • #17
PeterDonis said:
What charged radiation are you talking about? Are you talking about Hawking radiation?
I only said "radiation". Because Hawking's radiation involves virtual pairs. Tunneling radiation, or some other kind we have not thought of yet, might not be considered Hawking radiation.
 
  • #18
Larry Pendarvis said:
if you put just protons into a black hole, at some point you are going to get positrons out. As it radiates off its mass, its charge becomes more and more important.

I haven't looked at detailed treatments of Hawking radiation from a charged black hole, so I don't know how, exactly, the charge gets radiated away. What you're saying seems reasonable, but I would want to look at a reference.

Larry Pendarvis said:
I am imagining turning a fire hose onto a small black hole that is vigorously trying to evaporate, putting in just enough mass to keep its mass steady. Eventually you will be putting in a lot more mass than the BH had when you started, and you will have gotten out just as much mass-energy.

Yes, this would work in principle.

Larry Pendarvis said:
This seems to put a new face on the question of where does the information go. The entropy of the black hole does not change, yet a lot of information is apparently being destroyed - since, as you say, the energy for the Hawking radiation comes from the spacetime curvature of the hole, and it will happen even if nothing at all is falling in... thus it has no correlation with what is fueling the BH.

One key point to keep in mind here is that Hawking radiation in the presence of infalling matter might work differently from Hawking radiation in the absence of infalling matter. Hawking's original derivation assumed that the hole starts in a vacuum state, i.e., no infalling matter. AFAIK there is not a single accepted model of what happens in the presence of infalling matter; that's part of what the current debate about the black hole information paradox is about.

Larry Pendarvis said:
how can that tiny BH contain so much information? So little entropy.

The information isn't contained in the tiny BH; it's contained in the matter that falls in, and gets transferred to the radiation coming out. So it doesn't have to all be contained in the tiny BH. At least, that's one proposed resolution of the BH information paradox. But not everybody agrees with that picture AFAIK (one obvious question is what mechanism at the horizon transfers the information).

Larry Pendarvis said:
Hawking's radiation involves virtual pairs. Tunneling radiation, or some other kind we have not thought of yet, might not be considered Hawking radiation.

AFAIK "Hawking radiation" is just a general term for "any kind of radiation coming out of a BH due to quantum effects". All of the mechanisms proposed, including the one in the paper you quoted, fit that definition. And, as I said before, all of this is still a matter of debate; there is no single accepted model of what happens when things fall into a BH, taking quantum effects into account. There isn't even a single accepted model of what happens when nothing falls into a BH, taking quantum effects into account. For that we would need a complete, verified theory of quantum gravity, and we don't have one. Hawking conceded his bet, but that wasn't based on having a complete, verified model; it was just based on his intuition about what such a model will end up looking like.
 
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  • #19
PeterDonis said:
One key point to keep in mind here is that Hawking radiation in the presence of infalling matter might work differently from Hawking radiation in the absence of infalling matter. Hawking's original derivation assumed that the hole starts in a vacuum state, i.e., no infalling matter. AFAIK there is not a single accepted model of what happens in the presence of infalling matter; that's part of what the current debate about the black hole information paradox is about.
You can send in pulses of matter so that, 99.9999% of the time, radiation proceeds without any infalling matter.
From John Baez's web site:
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/BlackHoles/info_loss.html
"Take a quantum system in a pure state and throw it into a black hole. Wait for some amount of time until the hole has evaporated enough to return to its mass previous to throwing anything in. What we start with is a pure state and a black hole of mass M. What we end up with is a thermal state and a black hole of mass M. We have found a process (apparently) that converts a pure state into a thermal state. But, and here's the kicker, a thermal state is a MIXED state (described quantum mechanically by a density matrix rather than a wave function). In transforming between a mixed state and a pure state, one must throw away information. For instance, in our example we took a state described by a set of eigenvalues and coefficients, a large set of numbers, and transformed it into a state described by temperature, one number. All the other structure of the state was lost in the transformation."
 
  • #20
Larry Pendarvis said:
From John Baez's web site

This is a statement of the problem (what I called the "black hole information paradox" earlier), not a statement of the solution. As I said before, there is no generally accepted solution, even for the case where there is no infalling matter, because we don't have a good theory of quantum gravity.
 
  • #21
PeterDonis said:
This is a statement of the problem (what I called the "black hole information paradox" earlier), not a statement of the solution. As I said before, there is no generally accepted solution, even for the case where there is no infalling matter, because we don't have a good theory of quantum gravity.
Yes but it would seem to rule out a "Planck Star" or "Nugget" solution, since the "conversion" takes place even if the BH never evaporates away. Either that or the nugget can store as much information as is currently in the entire universe, without mass - which seems problematic.
Thus each time we throw in hydrogen and get out photons/neutrinos/electrons/positrons, it looks like those particular hydrogen atom protons are being "converted" to positrons and some other stuff. This can go on for trillions of years, for jillions of rounds of matter pulses and periods of radiation.
Is it possible, in principle, for an experiment to distinguish between an ensemble of pure states and an ensemble of mixed states? If not, then there would seem to be no information loss. If so, how?
 
  • #22
Larry Pendarvis said:
it would seem to rule out a "Planck Star" or "Nugget" solution, since the "conversion" takes place even if the BH never evaporates away.

I'm not sure I understand. Again, what you quoted from Baez is not what we actually know to be true; it's what we get if we just apply our "naive" understanding of relativity and quantum mechanics to a black hole. Since what we get is inconsistent with at least one of those theories (either there isn't actually a singularity at the center of the hole, which contradicts GR, or unitarity is violated, which contradicts QM), we obviously do not understand this regime properly. So we can't use the reasoning given in Baez's article to actually rule out anything; all it tells us is that we definitely have a problem.

Note, also, that the "conversion" scenario you describe is also not known to be correct. It seems plausible to me, but that doesn't mean it's known to be correct. It isn't. We won't know until we have a theory of quantum gravity, which we don't. And since we can't do any experiments in this regime, just about anything we come up with is going to be speculation.

Larry Pendarvis said:
Is it possible, in principle, for an experiment to distinguish between an ensemble of pure states and an ensemble of mixed states?

Yes--at least, if we accept standard QM in this respect.

Larry Pendarvis said:
If so, how?

You look for the interference terms that distinguish the pure state from the mixed state. To put it another way, you look for entanglement, which will be present in the pure state but absent in the mixed state. If you want to go into this in more detail, it should be a separate thread in the Quantum Physics forum.
 
  • #23
IMO the OP hasn't explained very clearly what he has in mind, or connected his ideas to each other clearly. But anyway, it may be relevant to note that the black-hole no-hair theorems are only for electrovac solutions; solutions with hair are known for other fields besides the electromagnetic field. See http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-1998-6 . Also, it is certainly true that Hawking radiation is expected to violate various conservation laws of particle physics, such as lepton number.
http://www.livingreviews.org/lrr-1998-6
 
  • #24
  • #25
Ben, thanks, that is a great review article, and I think it provides a good note on which to close the thread.
 

1. Can a maximal charged black hole have "flavor" or weak hair?

This is a frequently asked question in the field of black hole physics. The answer is that it is currently unknown whether a maximal charged black hole can have "flavor" or weak hair. The concept of "flavor" or weak hair refers to the possibility of a black hole carrying unique identifying characteristics, similar to how individual particles have different properties such as mass and charge.

2. What is a maximal charged black hole?

A maximal charged black hole is a hypothetical type of black hole that has the maximum possible electric charge allowed in general relativity. This type of black hole is not yet confirmed to exist in nature and is mainly studied in theoretical physics.

3. How does the concept of "flavor" or weak hair relate to black hole entropy?

The concept of "flavor" or weak hair is closely related to the black hole entropy. Entropy is a measure of the disorder or randomness of a system, and it is believed that black holes also have an entropy proportional to their surface area. The presence of "flavor" or weak hair on a black hole would increase its entropy, leading to further research on this topic.

4. Are there any observational evidence for "flavor" or weak hair on black holes?

As of now, there is no observational evidence for the presence of "flavor" or weak hair on black holes. This concept is mainly studied through theoretical models and mathematical calculations. Further research and advancements in technology may lead to observational evidence in the future.

5. What are the implications of a maximal charged black hole having "flavor" or weak hair?

If it is eventually confirmed that a maximal charged black hole can have "flavor" or weak hair, it would have significant implications for our understanding of black holes and the laws of physics. It could also have implications for the evolution and fate of black holes and the universe as a whole.

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