Can we detect changes inside a black hole through orbits?

In summary, a black hole can only have three properties: mass, rotation, and electric charge. No other properties are possible. When an object falls into a black hole, its mass, angular momentum, and electric charge are added to the black hole's properties, but no other information about the swallowed object can ever exit the black hole again. The black hole information paradox is not associated with those properties. Information waves continue to exit the black hole as “ringdown” after a mass goes beyond the event horizon. But also as I understand it time almost stops beyond the event horizon. So why do we still hear what is going on inside?
  • #1
Torog
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I read recently that no information comes out of a black hole. Doesn’t the mass information exit a Black hole with ease? Say I am orbiting a black hole and looking away. If while looking away the black hole gobbled up another star I could tell immediately that something had changed inside the hole by the shift in my orbit. Isn’t this solid information on what is inside? Another question: How fast does this information travel?
 
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  • #2
Torog said:
If while looking away the black hole gobbled up another star I could tell immediately that something had changed inside the hole by the shift in my orbit. Isn’t this solid information on what is inside?

How could you tell that the black hole ate a star? Why not an equal mass in pure gold? Or a gazillion Justin Biebers?
 
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  • #3
The mass that fell into the black hole didn't was hanging around outside the event horizon and contributing to shifts in your orbit before it crossed the horizon. Thus, these observed shifts don't tell us anything about what's changed inside the black hole, they tell us about the distribution of mass at some time in the past, before the mass fell through the horizon.
 
  • #4
Torog said:
I read recently that no information comes out of a black hole. Doesn’t the mass information exit a Black hole with ease?
The full statement about what happens with information "leaving" a black hole comes from the "no hair" theorem. This theorem proves that in General Relativity, a black hole can only have three properties: mass, rotation, and electric charge. No other properties are possible. You can't have, for example, a black hole with hair (hence the name of the theorem).

This means that when an object enters a black hole, its mass, angular momentum, and charge are added to the black hole's properties, but no other information about the swallowed object can ever exit the black hole again.
 
  • #5
Black holes has properties mass, electric charge, and angular momemtum, all of which can change in time, and all of which can be detected remotely from outside the event horizon. Does that mean information leaks from inside? I don't want to say. Ordinary language descriptions of space and time become very difficult in that neighborhood. For example, as @Nugatory just said, before something changes inside the BH, something outside must fall in (bringing mass, charge, and momentum in with it.) That clouds the question.

The so-called black hole information paradox is not associated with those properties.
 
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  • #6
Information waves continue to exit the black hole as “ringdown” after a mass goes beyond the event horizon. This seems to be confirmed by the recent LIGO experiments. But also as I understand it time almost stops beyond the event horizon. So why do we still hear what is going on inside?
 
  • #7
Torog said:
Information waves continue to exit the black hole as “ringdown” after a mass goes beyond the event horizon.
Why do you think this is information about the mass leaving the black hole?
 
  • #8
Torog said:
also as I understand it time almost stops beyond the event horizon.

This is not correct. A correct statement would be that, for an object of negligible mass falling into a black hole, and sending light signals outward as it falls, the signals sent outward from closer and closer to the horizon take longer and longer to get back out to an observer at some fixed altitude far away. (And no light signals emitted by the object will get out at all from at or below the horizon.)

However, this description, as just noted, applies to an object of negligible mass (compared to the mass of the hole) falling in. The situation you are talking about--where the object that gets "eaten" by the hole adds significant mass to the hole--is more complicated and the simple description given above does not apply.

Torog said:
why do we still hear what is going on inside?

We don't. Gravitational waves emitted when a black hole "eats" a large object come from outside the horizon. They are telling you, heuristically, about asymmetries in the infall process, which are radiated away to leave behind a perfectly symmetrical hole (i.e., a hole with no "hair", no externally measurable properties besides mass, angular momentum, and electric charge).
 
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  • #9
kimbyd said:
Why do you think this is information about the mass leaving the black hole?
It seems as if the ringdown happens after one black hole joins another and all the mass is beyond an event horizon. The ringdown could be noise as the masses settle down beyond the event horizon.
 
  • #10
Torog said:
The ringdown could be noise as the masses settle down beyond the event horizon.

No, it isn't. It is the "settling down" of the final hole itself into a symmetrical configuration, i.e., one with no "hair". In other words, it's the radiating away of any "hair" that is left over after the holes have merged. The "hair" is outside the horizon, so nothing has to escape from the horizon for it to radiate away.
 
  • #11
PeterDonis said:
No, it isn't. It is the "settling down" of the final hole itself into a symmetrical configuration, i.e., one with no "hair". In other words, it's the radiating away of any "hair" that is left over after the holes have merged. The "hair" is outside the horizon, so nothing has to escape from the horizon for it to radiate away.

I can know the mass of a black hole from the outside and when two black holes merge, say 14 and 7 solar masses, and I can tell what the internal mass of the black hole is after the fact. I get a nice clear signal, the mass makes a big distortion of the local spacetime. Why can I “see” the mass when it is stable first at 14 solar masses and then at 21 solar masses and not the be able to detect the waves coming from the internal mass as it wiggles and jiggles into a stable state?

And why is there an eye next to my post? Is the post interesting or are you worried I might not obey the rules?
 
  • #12
Torog said:
And why is there an eye next to my post? Is the post interesting or are you worried I might not obey the rules?
It means this is on your https://www.physicsforums.com/watched/threads/all . Any thread you contribute to is, by default, added to your watched thread list. You can change the default behaviour in your https://www.physicsforums.com/account/preferences.
 
  • #13
Torog said:
I can know the mass of a black hole from the outside and when two black holes merge, say 14 and 7 solar masses, and I can tell what the internal mass of the black hole is after the fact. I get a nice clear signal, the mass makes a big distortion of the local spacetime. Why can I “see” the mass when it is stable first at 14 solar masses and then at 21 solar masses and not the be able to detect the waves coming from the internal mass as it wiggles and jiggles into a stable state?
As I understand it, the sequence is this:
1. Two black holes spiral towards one another. We can discover the masses of each by measuring their gravitational effect.
2. The two black holes collide, forming a new black hole with a new horizon. The space-time outside the horizon, however, is disturbed greatly by the violent event.
3. The disturbance in space-time outside the newly merged black hole radiates away as gravitational radiation, leaving a symmetrical black hole and a smooth space-time behind.
 
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  • #14
Torog said:
Why can I “see” the mass when it is stable first at 14 solar masses and then at 21 solar masses and not the be able to detect the waves coming from the internal mass as it wiggles and jiggles into a stable state?

You can detect those waves; those are the gravitational waves that come from the black hole merger.
 
  • #15
DrGreg said:
It means this is on your https://www.physicsforums.com/watched/threads/all . Any thread you contribute to is, by default, added to your watched thread list. You can change the default behaviour in your https://www.physicsforums.com/account/preferences.

Now I'm embarrassed. My paranoia showing through!
 
  • #16
PeterDonis said:
You can detect those waves; those are the gravitational waves that come from the black hole merger.

Can I then say that the event horizon around the black hole is transparent to gravity waves?
 
  • #17
Torog said:
Can I then say that the event horizon around the black hole is transparent to gravity waves?
The event horizon is not a stationary surface surrounding a fixed object. It is (locally) moving outward at the speed of light. Gravitational waves (if any) cannot pass through it in the outbound direction because they cannot catch up to it. Transparency does not enter in.
 
  • #18
jbriggs444 said:
The event horizon is not a stationary surface surrounding a fixed object. It is (locally) moving outward at the speed of light. Gravitational waves (if any) cannot pass through it in the outbound direction because they cannot catch up to it. Transparency does not enter in.

From outside the black hole we can detect the change in mass after two black holes merge. Isn’t the detection of the change in gravity a type of gravity wave only slower. As I said above if I can detect the total mass beyond the event horizon why can’t I detect the masses settling down (as seen by LIGO) from my point of view, beyond the event horizon.
 
  • #19
Torog said:
Can I then say that the event horizon around the black hole is transparent to gravity waves?

No. The gravitational waves come from outside the horizon. See post #10.
 
  • #21
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1. What information can be obtained from a black hole?

The information that can be obtained from a black hole depends on the type of black hole and its size. However, generally, information such as the mass, spin, and charge of the black hole can be obtained through various observational techniques.

2. Can information escape from a black hole?

According to the theory of general relativity, once an object crosses the event horizon of a black hole, it can no longer escape. This includes information. However, some theories suggest that information may be able to escape from black holes in the form of Hawking radiation, but this is still a topic of debate among scientists.

3. How do black holes form and how do they affect their surroundings?

Black holes are formed when a massive star dies and collapses under its own gravity. This creates a singularity, a point of infinite density, surrounded by an event horizon. Black holes can have a significant impact on their surroundings, as their strong gravitational pull can distort space-time and influence the motion of nearby objects.

4. Is there any way to observe the inside of a black hole?

Currently, there is no way to directly observe the inside of a black hole due to the intense gravity that prevents anything, including light, from escaping. However, scientists can study the effects of black holes on their surroundings to gather information about their properties and behavior.

5. Could a black hole destroy Earth?

The chances of a black hole destroying Earth are incredibly slim. The nearest known black hole, V616 Monocerotis, is about 3,000 light-years away, and its event horizon is only a few kilometers in diameter. It would take a black hole with a mass of at least a few million times that of our sun to pose a threat to Earth, and there are currently no known black holes of this size in our galaxy.

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