Can Exotic Matter Escape the Gravitational Pull of a Black Hole?

Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of exotic matter and its potential behavior in relation to black holes, particularly whether such matter could escape the gravitational pull of a black hole's event horizon. Participants explore theoretical implications, definitions of speed, and the nature of gravity in this context.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that if a particle with negative mass were to cross the event horizon, it might be repelled from the black hole at a velocity greater than the speed of light.
  • Others argue that exotic matter would not exceed the speed of light and would require work to approach the black hole due to the repulsive nature of gravity on such matter.
  • There is a discussion about the invariant nature of the speed of light, with some clarifying that all observers measure the same speed for light in a vacuum, while others question the nuances between "invariant" and "constant."
  • One participant raises an analogy involving projectiles and escape velocity, suggesting that the dynamics near a black hole are not fully analogous to classical mechanics.
  • Another participant introduces the concept of tachyons, which theoretically could escape the event horizon due to their imaginary mass, although their existence remains unproven.
  • Several participants discuss the implications of firing photons radially outward from the event horizon and the complexities involved in such scenarios, including the role of the observer's frame of reference.
  • There is mention of a potential document that could clarify orbits and trajectories near black holes, indicating a desire for more structured information on the topic.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no consensus reached on the behavior of exotic matter or the implications of the speed of light in the context of black holes. The discussion remains unresolved with competing perspectives on the nature of gravity and the behavior of matter near event horizons.

Contextual Notes

Some limitations in the discussion include the dependence on definitions of mass and speed, as well as the unresolved nature of certain theoretical constructs like tachyons. The complexity of gravitational effects near black holes is acknowledged but not fully explored.

Silvertail
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
A thought experiment. C is considered to be a constant speed, that can not be exceeded. Once light passes the event horizon of a black hole however, the gravitational pull is strong enough to exceed, C. This is indicated by the supposition, that not even light can escape the event horizon of a black hole.
So what about Exotic Matter? If a particle with negative mass were to somehow pass the event horizon of a black hole, would it not then be repelled from the black hole at a velocity greater then C?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Silvertail said:
A thought experiment. c is considered to be a constant speed, that can not be exceeded.
No. All observers measure the same speed for light in a vacuum. We say that c is "invariant", not "constant". The difference is quite subtle though.

Once light passes the event horizon of a black hole however, the gravitational pull is strong enough to exceed, C.
That sentence does not mean anything.
The event horizon of a black hole is where the escape velocity is greater than the speed of light. Not gravity.

This is indicated by the supposition, that not even light can escape the event horizon of a black hole.
Which depends on what you mean by "escape the event horizon".

Consider: classically, on the Earth, if you fire a projectile slower than the escape velocity at the surface of the Earth then it may still escape the surface. i.e. it flies through the air. Of course this escape is temporary - unless it gets fired into an orbit. Fired at the escape velocity, and the projectile does not come back down ...

So what about Exotic Matter? If a particle with negative mass were to somehow pass the event horizon of a black hole, would it not then be repelled from the black hole at a velocity greater then c?
You are considering the possibility of antigravity.
The short answer is "no" - exotic matter would not exceed the speed of light either, it would just get a lot of kinetic energy. But, since gravity is repulsive for the object you are considering, you would have to do work on it to bring it close to the BH. The same reasoning that says that light does not escape also means the exotic-matter does not get in.

The relationships are not so simple though - I'm sure one of the others will be keen to talk about where I am cringingly oversimplifying things :)
 
I'm just a novice. Thank you.
 
No worries: we've all been there.
Being new does not exclude you from the discussion and gives you the advantage of being able to ask "naive" questions without losing face :)

Anyway - newcomers often come up with questions that more experienced people would never think of.
 
Simon Bridge said:
No. All observers measure the same speed for light in a vacuum. We say that c is "invariant", not "constant". The difference is quite subtle though.
I think in SR "invariant" and "constant" are the same thing, aren't they? In GR, it would mean a local c has the same "invariant" numerical value of c, though it is not an Universal constant, as a non-local value of c could be different. Is that the subtle difference?

Which depends on what you mean by "escape the event horizon".

Consider: classically, on the Earth, if you fire a projectile slower than the escape velocity at the surface of the Earth then it may still escape the surface. i.e. it flies through the air. Of course this escape is temporary - unless it gets fired into an orbit. Fired at the escape velocity, and the projectile does not come back down ...
But of course, this is not a full analogy in GR terms? A projectile fired at the 'escape velocity' at the event horizon never spatially leaves the event horizon I imagine.

In fact, this raises an interesting question. If something were fired radially outward at the event horizon at 'escape velocity', it would always continue to hover at the event horizon and never get drawn into the black hole. I assume that is correct?
 
Even at an event horizon, in the local frame of every inertial observer, light moves at c.

What could escape the event horizon, if they exist, are tachyons. These have imaginary mass not negative mass. If they exist (all searches are negative), they travel on spacelike trajectories, and these readily escape
the event horizon.
 
adrian_m said:
I think in SR "invariant" and "constant" are the same thing, aren't they? In GR, it would mean a local c has the same "invariant" numerical value of c, though it is not an Universal constant, as a non-local value of c could be different. Is that the subtle difference?
It's more to do with how you think of it.

Consder: a constant speed is something one sees other things travel at - if something traveled at a constant velocity of 30m/s and you traveled at a constant velocity, same direction, of 20m/s, then the "something" would be traveling at a constant velocity of 10m/s right?

But if the 30m/s were invarient, then, no matter how fast you went, the "something" would always be traveling at 30m/s.

I think your other questions have already been answered by PAllen.
If you were hovering at the horizon - goodness knows how, and you fired a photon radially away from the hole, would it just hover there next to you?

Basically your questions are getting confused because you keep leaving out the observer.
Where the observer is and what they are doing there makes a difference.
 
Simon Bridge said:
If you were hovering at the horizon - goodness knows how, and you fired a photon radially away from the hole, would it just hover there next to you?

.

Hovering at the horizon means you are following a lightlike world line, that is 'you are a photon'. Thus the statement becomes, from an inertial frame (crossing the horizon) what happens if a photon splits or decays? If this were an allowed process, the inertial observer sees one photon become two, moving along the same lightlike world line. Put in this correct local framework, the question becomes a general question about light in SR.

Strictly classically, a model of a massless particle with energy E splitting into 2 comoving massless particles each with energy E/2 (for example) is allowed within SR: 4 momentum is conserved.

Within QFT, this turns out to be a prohibited process. There was a long thread on this:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=512811
 
Yeah - it's really annoying to talk about and only reinforces the point about naive thought experiments... the another approach is to have a free-falling observer fire the photon radially outwards.

There's probably a document someplace that handles these sorts of things ... orbits, ballistic trajectories etc in the situations people keep asking about - close to or at the event horizon.
 
  • #10
Simon Bridge said:
Yeah - it's really annoying to talk about and only reinforces the point about naive thought experiments... the another approach is to have a free-falling observer fire the photon radially outwards.

There's probably a document someplace that handles these sorts of things ... orbits, ballistic trajectories etc in the situations people keep asking about - close to or at the event horizon.

Free falling body emitting radial outward photon at horizon is easy to analyze. To an observer hovering outside the BH, it never arrives. In the sense that in the limit of ever closer hovering observers, this photon is never detected, but also never reaches singularity, it is valid to describe it globally as trapped on the horizon.

For a free faller, such a photon appears to recede at c, nothing special.

Consider also two successive free fallers emitting photons the moment each crosses the horizon, each photon trapped in place. This corresponds to the following everyday phenomenon in an inertial frame: A emits a photon toward B, B emits a photon simultaneous with the arrival of photon from A (could be stimulated emission!). The two photons proceed passed B, in tandem.

Everything that happens at the horizon has a perfectly ordinary local SR description. It is only when you look at the global picture that you discover remarkable features.
 
  • #11
Everything that happens at the horizon has a perfectly ordinary local SR description. It is only when you look at the global picture that you discover remarkable features.
Which is why I'm trying to encourage OP to include where the observer is and what it's doing when considering these sorts of questions... check to see if the question makes sense.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 40 ·
2
Replies
40
Views
4K
  • · Replies 22 ·
Replies
22
Views
2K
  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
3K
  • · Replies 31 ·
2
Replies
31
Views
2K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 62 ·
3
Replies
62
Views
9K
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 11 ·
Replies
11
Views
2K