Matter-Antimatter black hole collision

In summary, it is uncertain what exactly happens when a black hole made of antimatter collides or merges with a black hole made of regular matter. However, current theories suggest that all matter and antimatter would become part of the singularity at the center of the black hole. The nature of the singularity and the matter-energy within a black hole is unknown and possibly unknowable in theory. In a merger of black holes, the total mass-energy and angular momentum of the black holes determine the properties of the resulting black hole. The popular notion of a black hole "sucking in everything" in its surroundings is only accurate near its horizon; far away, the gravitational field is identical to that of any other spherical object of the same mass.
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wheyghey
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What would happen if a matter black hole and an antimatter black hole collided or merged if they were equally massive?
From what I understand, a black hole can exist that was formed entirely from antimatter. If this antimatter black hole were to collide or merge with a black hole that has the exact same mass, but was made of regular matter, what would happen?

Obviously the matter and antimatter would annihilate when they came into "contact", but is that even what would happen? Would they come into "contact"? If so, would they annihilate? And if they did, would the newly merged black hole disappear along with a huge release of energy? Or, since the light can't escape a black hole, would it just revert back in on itself and be "squeezed" back into matter/antimatter particle pairs that would once again annihilate, and so on in an endless cycle? Would that equilibrate into some exotic state maybe?

If the masses were not equal, but there was a bit more mass in the black hole made from regular matter, but enough matter was annihilated so that there isn't enough mass to sustain a black hole anymore, would it still be able to release a bunch of energy and blow apart?
 
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It is uncertain just WHAT the state of matter (and antimatter) even IS inside a BH. In any event, the current theory just says that all of it would become part of the singularity at the "center". If/when we get a theory of quantum gravity maybe we'll know better.
 
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Thanks for the reply, phinds.

Yes, it's true that the nature of the "singularity" is unknown, but I would have to imagine that it retains its matter-like properties since it is indeed acting like matter in that it has mass. So I would also assume that the antimatter would also retain its antimatter-like properties.

But, now that you mention it, electrons and protons are smashed together to make nothing but neutrons in a neutron star, and positrons and antiprotons would be smashed together to make nothing but antineutrons in an antineutron star, so maybe once you smash neutronium or anti-neutronium down into whatever it is in a black hole, there would be no distinction between the two.

And then when I think about it further, matter and antimatter need not annihilate each other. Is that correct? A meson is made of a quark and an antiquark interacting without always annihilating (although some do IIRC).
 
  • #4
wheyghey said:
but I would have to imagine that it retains its matter-like properties since it is indeed acting like matter in that it has mass
You have misunderstood what the singularity is. It is not a place in space as it is more akin to a moment in time. It is where (when) worldlines of objects falling into the black hole end in finite proper time.

wheyghey said:
so maybe once you smash neutronium or anti-neutronium down into whatever it is in a black hole, there would be no distinction between the two.
There is a difference between a neutron and an antineutron. One has baryon number +1 and the other -1.

However, this is irrelevant for your original question. The black holes merge to a larger black hole.

Let us stop talking about the singularity, let us take a particle-antiparticle pair anihilating to photons just inside the horizon of a black hole. Since it is a black hole, the photons cannot escape and eventually end up hitting the singularity - both adding their energy to the mass of the black hole.

So the answer is that you end up with a bigger black hole.

Please also note forum rules in regards to personal speculation (it is not allowed).
 
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The nature of the matter-energy within a black hole is not just unknown in practice, but unknowable in theory. Matter particles, antimatter particles, and particles like photons that are neither matter nor antimatter, all have mass-energy and mass-energy is conserved in a merger of black holes.

Interactions of black hole with the world beyond the event-horizon and its properties are purely a function of the total amount of mass-energy within the event horizon and its angular momentum (and also its electromagnetic charge in the purely hypothetical possibility of a black hole with electric charge).

It is worth restating the basics:

The simplest static black holes have mass but neither electric charge nor angular momentum. These black holes are often referred to as Schwarzschild black holes after Karl Schwarzschild who discovered this solution in 1916. According to Birkhoff's theorem, it is the only vacuum solution that is spherically symmetric. This means that there is no observable difference at a distance between the gravitational field of such a black hole and that of any other spherical object of the same mass. The popular notion of a black hole "sucking in everything" in its surroundings is therefore only correct near a black hole's horizon; far away, the external gravitational field is identical to that of any other body of the same mass.

Solutions describing more general black holes also exist. Non-rotating charged black holes are described by the Reissner–Nordström metric, while the Kerr metric describes a non-charged rotating black hole. The most general stationary black hole solution known is the Kerr–Newman metric, which describes a black hole with both charge and angular momentum. . . . Due to the relatively large strength of the electromagnetic force, black holes forming from the collapse of stars are expected to retain the nearly neutral charge of the star. Rotation, however, is expected to be a universal feature of compact astrophysical objects.

Thus, Schwarzschild and Kerr black holes have purely gravitational interactions and properties characterized solely by total mass-energy and in the case of Kerr black holes, angular momentum, while Reissner–Nordström and Kerr–Newman black holes may not even exist.

There is really no reason to imagine that significantly charged black holes should exist, but figuring out if they do or not presents multiple conflicting issues. On one hand, we know of no process where net electromagnetic charge is not conserved. On the other hand, it shouldn't be possible for electromagnetic forces to escape from a black hole formulated in a classical manner. Experimentally, it would also be hard to distinguish charged matter in close orbit around a black hole from charged matter within the event horizon of the black hole itself, something that would have to be done with telescopes from many light years away for the foreseeable future.

In theory, the gravitational effects of matter and the gravitational effects of anti-matter are indistinguishable and they can have angular momentum in the same way.

The equivalence principle predicts that the gravitational acceleration of antimatter is the same as that of ordinary matter. A matter-antimatter gravitational repulsion is thus excluded from this point of view. Furthermore, photons, which are their own antiparticles in the framework of the Standard Model, have in a large number of astronomical tests (gravitational redshift and gravitational lensing, for example) been observed to interact with the gravitational field of ordinary matter exactly as predicted by the general theory of relativity. This is a feature that has to be explained by any theory predicting that matter and antimatter repel.

None of the direct experimental tests of this attempted to date have revealed anything to the contrary, and suggest that this is true, but experimental test are so far inconclusive. This is because direct experimental tests are tricky to extract experimental results from because (1) most anti-matter lives for only fractions of a second in our matter dominated world (except in the case of anti-neutrinos), (2) the anti-matter we have to study involve particles no bigger than individual atoms which makes for a small target to observe and also means that the strength of gravitational forces relative to other forces at play is tiny, and (3) the propagation of individual particles needs to be understood using quantum mechanics and classical mechanics are only statistical averages of probabilistic quantum mechanical motion which is much more complex to analyze.

Purely Matter or Antimatter Sourced Black Holes Would Be Unphysical.

Because of the huge flux of neutrinos and antineutrinos through open space over a sufficiently long time, and the flux of photons, we can be confident that there is no such thing as a black hole formed purely from matter or purely from antimatter that can exist long enough to collide into another black hole.

Also, since there is no reason to believe that there have ever been antimatter dominated areas of the universe at any time more than a few moments after the Big Bang, the hypothetical proposed is not a physical possibility. This is because there can not physically be any black hole in our universe formed predominantly from antimatter.

The Internal Composition Of A Black Hole Doesn't Matter

But, honestly, the matter or antimatter or neither matter or antimatter status of the mass-energy that went into making a black hole is irrelevant anyway. A black hole doesn't have to have any matter inside it to gravitate in the same way. A black hole could be made up of pure photons within the event horizon, and the gravitational effect would be the same, and we would never know it because photons can't escape the event horizon any more than matter can, by definition. The inability of photons to escape is what makes a black hole a black hole.

It is possible as a result of Hawking radiation, which is strongly believed to exist in theory but has never been observed (because it is a tiny magnitude effect), but that doesn't change the fact that we don't know and can't really know what is inside a black hole. (There is a huge theoretical discussion regarding the "black hole information paradox" but for purposes of knowing the matter-antimatter-neither composition of what is within a black hole in any meaningful macroscopic way, it doesn't really matter.)

I would have to imagine that it retains its matter-like properties since it is indeed acting like matter in that it has mass. So I would also assume that the antimatter would also retain its antimatter-like properties.

None of those assumption are safe outside the domain of applicability of the laws of physics upon which they are based, which is in regions outside black holes. but, even if it did, as noted above, it wouldn't matter. Black holes made entirely of matter, entirely of antimatter, or entirely of photons, for example, would be indistinguishable from each other and behave identically.
 

1. What is a matter-antimatter black hole collision?

A matter-antimatter black hole collision occurs when a black hole, composed of matter, collides with an anti-black hole, composed of antimatter. This results in the annihilation of both objects, releasing a massive amount of energy in the form of gamma rays and other high-energy particles.

2. How do matter and antimatter interact in a black hole collision?

In a black hole collision, matter and antimatter particles come into contact and annihilate each other, converting their mass into energy. This process is governed by the laws of physics, specifically the principle of conservation of energy and mass.

3. What are the potential effects of a matter-antimatter black hole collision?

The effects of a matter-antimatter black hole collision can vary depending on the size and energy of the colliding objects. However, it is expected that the collision would release a tremendous amount of energy in the form of high-energy particles and radiation, potentially affecting the surrounding environment and nearby celestial bodies.

4. Is a matter-antimatter black hole collision possible in our universe?

While matter-antimatter collisions have been observed in particle accelerators, it is currently unknown if such collisions can occur between black holes in our universe. Some theories suggest that matter and antimatter black holes may exist in the universe, but their collision would be extremely rare due to the vast distances between objects in space.

5. How does a matter-antimatter black hole collision differ from a regular black hole collision?

A matter-antimatter black hole collision differs from a regular black hole collision in that it involves the annihilation of matter and antimatter, resulting in the release of energy. In a regular black hole collision, two black holes merge and combine their mass and energy, but there is no annihilation of matter involved.

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