Do black holes have a world line?

In summary: In the models Hawking is talking about, where quantum effects prevent an actual event horizon from forming, then you can still use the "tube" approximation I described in my previous post. The difference is that, instead of an event horizon and singularity being inside the tube, there will be whatever quantum effects prevent them from forming. These quantum effects are still pretty counterintuitive, and it is possible that a spacetime description would not work everywhere inside the tube (that depends on what kind of quantum gravity theory ultimately turns out to work).
  • #1
tionis
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I'm referring to the black hole itself, not some object falling in it.Thanks.
 
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  • #3
I would not call it a world line. It is a region of space-time, not a single line.
 
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  • #4
So the answer is no, then? Black holes do not have a world line?
 
  • #5
The question is misguided. A planet doesn't have a world line. It has a world tube. Same for a black hole, but you have to be careful what you call a black hole. If you refer to the whole space-time region, then the question is meaningless. If you refer to a space-like section, then it has a whole family of world lines.
 
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  • #7
I think the point of the OP's question is the confusion of things dropping into a black hole where worldlines terminate as discussed at length in books and articles on the subject VERSUS the black hole moving through spacetime itself on its way to gobble up more matter or to shrink and evaporate away.

As an aside. sometimes spacetime diagrams with the appropriate coordinate system can help:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruskal–Szekeres_coordinates
 
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  • #8
jedishrfu said:
As an aside. sometimes spacetime diagrams with the appropriate coordinate system can help:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruskal–Szekeres_coordinates

Yep - looking at the diagram it is clear that the black hole is a region of spacetime that cannot be described as either a worldline or a worldtube. Those concepts are only useful for objects moving on timelike paths through spacetime, whereas the blac hole is a more complicated thing: event horizon is a lightlike surface, singularity is in the future of all infalling worldlines.
 
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  • #9
Hawking said horizons probably don't exist. If that is found to be the case, are astrophysical black holes going to be assigned a worldtube, a worldline, or neither?
 
  • #10
Nugatory said:
looking at the diagram it is clear that the black hole is a region of spacetime that cannot be described as either a worldline or a worldtube.

Not if we insist on looking at the entire spacetime geometry, true. But for many purposes we can use an approximation, which works something like this: pick a "tube" of timelike worldlines that are all at some constant radial coordinate ##r## which is outside the hole's horizon. If we don't care about what happens to things that fall into the hole--we only care about how things look far away from the hole--then we can treat the hole as an ordinary object of the same mass that is confined within the "tube" we have picked out, and the "tube" itself is just the surface of the "world tube" of this ordinary object. For all events outside the tube, this works fine.
 
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  • #11
tionis said:
Hawking said horizons probably don't exist. If that is found to be the case, are astrophysical black holes going to be assigned a worldtube, a worldline, or neither?

In the models Hawking is talking about, where quantum effects prevent an actual event horizon from forming, then you can still use the "tube" approximation I described in my previous post. The difference is that, instead of an event horizon and singularity being inside the tube, there will be whatever quantum effects prevent them from forming. These quantum effects are still pretty counterintuitive, and it is possible that a spacetime description would not work everywhere inside the tube (that depends on what kind of quantum gravity theory ultimately turns out to work). So the answer to your question could still be "a worldtube" or "neither".
 
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1. What is a world line?

A world line is a concept used in physics to describe the path of an object through space and time. It represents the past, present, and future positions of the object and can be thought of as a 4-dimensional graph.

2. Do black holes have world lines?

Yes, black holes have world lines just like any other object in the universe. However, due to their extreme gravitational pull and the warping of spacetime near them, their world lines may appear differently than those of other objects.

3. How do black holes affect their own world lines?

Black holes have a significant effect on their own world lines due to their immense mass and gravitational pull. The closer an object gets to the event horizon (the point of no return), the more its world line will bend towards the singularity at the center of the black hole.

4. Can we observe the world line of a black hole?

No, we cannot directly observe the world line of a black hole. However, we can infer its existence and properties through observations of the effects it has on its surroundings, such as the bending of light and the motion of other objects.

5. How does the world line of a black hole change over time?

The world line of a black hole changes over time as it continues to grow and accrete matter. As more mass is added to the black hole, its gravitational pull and curvature of spacetime will increase, causing changes in its world line.

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