Do Black Holes Violate the Laws of Thermodynamics?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on whether black holes violate the First Law of Thermodynamics, which states that energy cannot be created or destroyed. Participants argue that when matter falls into a black hole, it increases the black hole's mass and energy, thus conserving the total energy in the universe. The concept of black holes as part of the universe is emphasized, countering the idea that they remove matter from it. Additionally, questions arise about the Second Law of Thermodynamics, particularly regarding entropy and how black holes might affect it. Overall, the consensus is that black holes do not violate thermodynamic laws, as they remain integral to the universe's energy balance.
pakoppan
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HI,

Simple question.

When matter falls into a black hole, I guess it leaves our known "Universe", although I think there is not a concrete proof of that.(we simply do not know what happens once matter reaches the singularity).
Anyway, when matter falls into the black hole is the First Law of Thermodynamics becomes invalid ? :confused:
Since energy is absorbed by the black hole and not given back , how is the same amount of energy replenished in order to keep the quantity of energy constant in our Universe? :confused:

Universe is considered a close system as far as I can say.


Thanks
 
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pakoppan said:
HI,

Simple question.

When matter falls into a black hole, I guess it leaves our known "Universe", although I think there is not a concrete proof of that.(we simply do not know what happens once matter reaches the singularity).
Anyway, when matter falls into the black hole is the First Law of Thermodynamics becomes invalid ? :confused:
Since energy is absorbed by the black hole and not given back , how is the same amount of energy replenished in order to keep the quantity of energy constant in our Universe? :confused:

Universe is considered a close system as far as I can say.


Thanks
No, the first law:

The first law of thermodynamics is often called the Law of Conservation of Energy.
This law suggests that energy can be transferred from one system to another in many forms. However, it can not be created nor destroyed. Thus, the total amount of energy available in the Universe is constant. Einstein's famous equation (written below) describes the relationship between energy and matter: e=mc2.
And actually, it is anywhere inside the event horizon that we don't know what's going on, not just at the singularity. That is for those who still believe in a singularity as a point-source, which I don't.

But, as for your question, since matter and energy are the same thing, any matter falling into the BH would increase its mass and, most likely, the angular momentum so nothing is "lost". a mass-to-mass equivalent would be apparent, and any mass-to-energy change would show up in the angular momentum change. There are several other processes to consider but they would still result in conforming with law #1.
 
Correct, whatever falls into the black hole does not leave the universe*...it increases the mass of the black hole...which increases the gravitational influence of the BH on this universe.

* athough it is now inaccessible to the universe except as noted above
 
This is a little off topic but what would happen if the object being sucked into the black hole was bigger than the black hole itself. Imagine putting a tennis ball in your bath tub and then unplugging the drain and seeing it being drawn towards the drain until it just clogs it up. Would the black hole find a way to get the supermassive matter into it? You know what replace the tennis ball with a soccer ball then what would happen?
 
When something falls into a black hole , it becoms part of the dense black hole and further increases its strength.

, I guess it leaves our known "Universe", although I think there is not a concrete proof of that.(we simply do not know what happens once matter reaches the singularity).

Certainly not , the object does not leave the universe ,infact black holes are a part of universe , (...I am anti-those-who-believe-black-holes are gateway to -other-universes..) ...Consider a system ,Let the system be the Universe and black holes are part of the system , when an object (which is a part of the universe..) goes into a black hole ( still remains the part of the universe..) ...Everything remains conserved ..nothing is violated...

Considering black hole not part of the universe is your assumption which leads your own created problems.

Since energy is absorbed by the black hole and not given back , how is the same amount of energy replenished in order to keep the quantity of energy constant in our Universe?

Even if Black holes were a gateway to some other universe , the same object that Black holes sucks in ...will be spitted out by the time-inverse of the black hole ..that is the white-hole. Though the white-hole concept is just mathematical , therefore if other universes exist , white-holes must...Energy which leaves one universe will appear in some other universe ...As a whole system of two universes energy remains conserved.
 
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Mozart said:
This is a little off topic but what would happen if the object being sucked into the black hole was bigger than the black hole itself. Imagine putting a tennis ball in your bath tub and then unplugging the drain and seeing it being drawn towards the drain until it just clogs it up. Would the black hole find a way to get the supermassive matter into it? You know what replace the tennis ball with a soccer ball then what would happen?
Tidal forces pulverize everything that approaches the event horizon.
 
Second Law of Thermodynamics

So, since we have covered the First Law, What of the Second?

I'm just curious to see if anyone knows.

By adding that mass, the Entropy goes down. Second law says that Entropy wants to always go up. How do Black Holes keep from violating the Second Law of Thermodynamics?
 
Moore1879 said:
So, since we have covered the First Law, What of the Second?

I'm just curious to see if anyone knows.

By adding that mass, the Entropy goes down. Second law says that Entropy wants to always go up. How do Black Holes keep from violating the Second Law of Thermodynamics?
It takes a bit of reading, but the following sites cover the subject fairly well:


http://relativity.livingreviews.org/open?pubNo=lrr-2001-6&page=node7.html

http://nrumiano.free.fr/Estars/bh_thermo.html

http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/gr-qc/pdf/9912/9912119.pdf (pg.17)

http://odarragh.astro.utoronto.ca/GR-II_presentations/Jonathan.Hillel.pdf
 
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