davLev
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Thanks for your prompt reply!
I assume that Shapiro & Teukolsky have offered the idea for the formation of the Neutron stars.PeterDonis said:They aren't "instantly" transformed. They are transformed during the process of collapse from an ordinary star to a neutron star. The density range during which this "neutronization" takes place (mostly by inverse beta decay) is discussed in detail in Shapiro & Teukolsky.
PeterDonis said:Neutrons (and protons) are made of quarks, so of course there are quarks everywhere in a neutron star. If by "quarks" you mean some other state of quarks besides neutrons or protons, there are speculations along these lines, but no good evidence for any of them that I'm aware of.
You shouldn't assume anything. You should go read Shapiro & Teukolsky.davLev said:I assume that Shapiro & Teukolsky have offered the idea for the formation of the Neutron stars.
Um, Shapiro & Teukolsky is a classic textbook on white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes, which discusses the evidence about those objects, as well as the theoretical models that explain the evidence, in great detail.davLev said:However, any idea should be confirmed by some sort of evidence.
No, we have some particular physicists' interpretation of the evidence. It says so right in what you quoted:davLev said:Yes, we have evidence:
Emphasis mine.davLev said:the matter in the interior of maximally massive stable neutron stars exhibits characteristics of the deconfined phase, which we interpret as evidence for the presence of quark-matter cores.
Not until standard terminology in the field does so. Which it hasn't.davLev said:Hence, is it acceptable to call those Neutron stars as quark-gluons stars?
This textbook was published in 1983.PeterDonis said:Um, Shapiro & Teukolsky is a classic textbook on white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes, which discusses the evidence about those objects, as well as the theoretical models that explain the evidence, in great detail.
We know that the rotation of the Earth reduces gravity slightly at the equator as compared to the Poles.PeterDonis said:Rotating neutron stars will have a somewhat larger maximum mass limit that depends on the rate of rotation. Most neutron stars that we observe are rotating pretty rapidly.
Is it possible for any composite particle (Neutron) to loss its hydrostatic equilibrium without losing its mass?PeterDonis said:What happens is that the neutron star, if it accretes enough mass to go above the maximum mass for a neutron star, is unable to maintain hydrostatic equilibrium and starts collapsing. This has nothing whatever to do with "breaking" neutrons or "taking out gluons". It's just a loss of hydrostatic equilibrium leading to collapse.
They can't.* That's one of the things we don't know about black holes. We don't know what happens to matter that falls inside. It's unlikely that it simply disappears, as that would violate various conservation laws. Our best explanation is that the black hole evaporates slowly over time via hawking radiation but what exactly happens to matter that falls into the black hole is unknown at this time.davLev said:Based on the above law of physics it is impossible for two neutrons to occupy the same quantum state/same space.
Therefore, why can't we claim that if we break the Neutrons, we also break their properties?
One of the key property of the neutron is its mass.
Therefore, how billions over billions of neutrons could keep their properties/mass while they all collapse into a Black hole and occupy the same quantum state/same space?
davLev said:Therefore, how billions over billions of neutrons could keep their properties/mass while they all collapse into a Black hole and occupy the same quantum state/same space?
ThanksDrakkith said:They can't.* That's one of the things we don't know about black holes. We don't know what happens to matter that falls inside. It's unlikely that it simply disappears, as that would violate various conservation laws.
Drakkith said:Our best explanation is that the black hole evaporates slowly over time via hawking radiation but what exactly happens to matter that falls into the black hole is unknown at this time.
Neutron is a composite particle (3 quarks and gluons)Drakkith said:*Note that mass is conserved, even when particles change into other particles. The mass of the protons and electrons that combine during supernovas to form the neutrons that make up the neutron star is not lost. It goes into forming the neutrons. The same thing would happen if neutrons are forced to change into something else. Their mass would go into that new system.
Yes.davLev said:This textbook was published in 1983.
Read the book and see. If you are under the impression that there was no such evidence in 1983, you are egregiously mistaken.davLev said:For me, evidence means observation.
I wonder what kind of observation Shapiro & Teukolsky have used to justify their theoretical astrophysics of Compact Objects?
If you would go and read Shapiro & Teukolsky, you would see that they discuss exactly this case. The answer is no, it won't decrease "dramatically" gravity, and it won't increase "dramatically" the maximum mass. Nothing that has been discovered since has changed that.davLev said:If the rotation of the neutron star is almost at the speed of light, could it decrease dramatically the total gravity?
If you "break" neutrons, you get quarks. Which are still fermions.davLev said:Based on the above law of physics it is impossible for two neutrons to occupy the same quantum state/same space.
Therefore, why can't we claim that if we break the Neutrons, we also break their properties?
Nobody "insists" on a singularity inside a BH. In fact, most physicists believe that the fact that GR predicts a singularity inside a BH means that GR is an incomplete theory, and is expected to be replaced by a more fundamental theory, probably some form of quantum gravity, in the regime where spacetime curvature reaches the Planck scale.davLev said:As the matter can't occupy the same quantum state/same space without breaking the law of science, then why do we insist for a singularity in a BH?
A BH is not a point. It does have spacetime inside it. You do not appear to have a good grasp of what our models of black holes actually say.davLev said:Why can't we agree that even BH should have some sort of internal space/radius?
That is the current belief, yes. However, we have no evidence of such evaporation, nor do we expect to get any any time soon. Indeed, even without any other matter or radiation falling into a black hole, the CMBR temperature is higher than the Hawking temperature of all the black holes we have observed, so those holes right now, and for a very, very long time in the future, will not be evaporating, they will be very slowly gaining mass as CMBR radiation falls into them.davLev said:What about SMBH and quasars?
Do we believe that all of them evaporate slowly over time via hawking radiation?
No. You evidently do not have a good understanding of the process you are talking about, or of gluons and quarks in general.davLev said:he neutron would be broken to its composite particle - quarks and gluons.
Could it be that the gluons mass would be lost once it is outside the neutron but the quark mass would be kept?
No. None of the references you give say any such thing.davLev said:If we add the impact of the spinning motion on the total gravity, could it be that Black hole is actually massive neutron (or quark) star which must have some sort of minimal radius?
Wow!PeterDonis said:In fact, most physicists believe that the fact that GR predicts a singularity inside a BH means that GR is an incomplete theory, and is expected to be replaced by a more fundamental theory, probably some form of quantum gravity, in the regime where spacetime curvature reaches the Planck scale.
PeterDonis said:Nobody "insists" on a singularity inside a BH.
PeterDonis said:A BH is not a point. It does have spacetime inside it.
No. It has spacetime inside it, but there is no "minimal" amount that it must have.davLev said:As you confirm that BH is not a singularity or a point and It does have spacetime inside it, then do you agree that BH must have some minimal space/volume/radius?
That's... complicated. Per this article: https://arxiv.org/abs/0801.1734davLev said:As you confirm that BH is not a singularity or a point and It does have spacetime inside it, then do you agree that BH must have some sort of space/volume/radius?
PeterDonis said:No. It has spacetime inside it, but there is no "minimal" amount that it must have.
The volume of a black hole is not well defined. You can get different answers depending on how you choose to assess it. Having infinite interior volume is a perfectly reasonable answer, or it can vary with time.davLev said:If it has spacetime, then how could it be that it has no space or volume?
I didn't say it has no space or volume. Go read what I said again.davLev said:If it has spacetime, then how could it be that it has no space or volume?
There is no contradiction. You are just not reading very carefully.davLev said:Can you please explain the contradiction?
Because of the issue described in the paper @Drakkith linked to. Which boils down to what @Ibix said:davLev said:why can't we agree that SMBH with 10^6 solar mass should have bigger volume than a BH with one solar mass (by about 10^6), while quasar should have a bigger volume than SMBH (by about 10^3)?
Ibix said:The volume of a black hole is not well defined.
Thanks for your comprehensive reply.Ibix said:The volume of a black hole is not well defined.
As you have confirmed that a BH is not a point. It does have spacetime inside it, while you didn't say that BH has no space or volume, then can we at least agree that it could have a volume?PeterDonis said:I didn't say it has no space or volume. Go read what I said again.
If we wish to obey law of science then the understanding that "two particles not wanting to occupy the same state" should be valid to any kind of object including Neutron stars and BHs.Ibix said:Fermion degeneracy pressure (what you were talking about with two particles not wanting to occupy the same state) supports neutron stars. Once the pressure is too high for that to stop collapse we know of nothing else that can
Did we ever observe a Neutron star as it collapse into BH?Ibix said:The result of allowing collapse to continue unchecked is the black hole singularity. Nobody thinks this is particularly plausible, but it's most likely a problem with general relativity - hence the search for a quantum theory of gravity. Simply saying (as you seem to be doing) "something must stop the collapse" is overly simplistic - we know we don't understand any of the rules right at the heart of a black hole.
Ibix said:Neutron stars are far more complicated because their size does depend on the details of what goes on inside.
The answer is that the volume of a black hole is not well-defined.davLev said:Please be aware that I didn't ask what is the volume, I have asked if BH has a volume.
Nobody said a "black hole" is not well-defined. It is. What is not well-defined is the volume of a black hole.davLev said:If the Black hole is not well defined
"Not well-defined" doesn't mean "might have a volume or might not". It means that, given a particular black hole, there is no one unique number that is the "volume" of the hole. You can get pretty much any number greater than zero and less than infinity, depending on how you define "volume". There is no one unique answer.davLev said:then we have to agree that it could have a volume.
Nobody has claimed that. Again, you need to read more carefully. You keep responding to things that nobody has said, and you do not appear to be properly comprehending what people have said.davLev said:If we claim that a black hole has no volume
BHs are not made of fermions, so no, this is not valid for BHs. It is valid for matter made of fermions that collapses to a black hole, but the black hole itself is not the same thing as the matter that collapsed to form it.davLev said:If we wish to obey law of science then the understanding that "two particles not wanting to occupy the same state" should be valid to any kind of object including Neutron stars and BHs.
Not directly, no. But there is plenty of indirect evidence to support our best current models of such a process.davLev said:Did we ever observe a Neutron star as it collapse into BH?
There is no such problem with regard to the process of a neutron star (or any other object) collapsing to a black hole.davLev said:As there might be a problem with general relativity
That's not correct. We do have a set of rules; that set of rules predicts that the matter that collapses to form a black hole collapses to zero size and is destroyed in a singularity.davLev said:as we know we don't understand any of the rules right at the heart of a black hole,
See above.davLev said:could it be that there is an error with the assumption of singularity in a BH?
Yes.davLev said:That definition works for a BH
No. A neutron star (or any other object that is not a black hole) has no event horizon, and the "Schwarzschild radius" calculation is physically meaningless for such an object.davLev said:and Neutron star (with one solar mass).
Nobody has claimed that we cannot see the surface of a neutron star. You can't see the surface of a black hole.davLev said:would you kindly explain why we can't see its surface which should be located outside the event horizon?