Questions on Hawking Radiation

In summary, virtual particles are created in the presence of a field and they serve as messengers of energy. They can be either positive or negative in mass and energy and can be destroyed very quickly.
  • #1
photon
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I've been reading about Hawking Radiation, and some questions have come up.

1) What exactly is a virtual particle?
2) What is negative mass and energy?
 
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  • #2
1)I think a virtual particle is one of a pair that pop into and then out of existence like that (*click*,*click*). If they pop up close enough to a black hole, one gets sucked in and the second pop doesn't happen, at which point one floats away. They always occur in opposite pairs ([electron, positron], etc..)
2)I'm not sure exactly.
Hope that helps!
 
  • #3
gee, thanks

Thank you for the highly detailed explanation.:wink:
 
  • #4
Detailed?

I don't know what I'm talking about! These are just my vague impressions and memories from some possibly questionable source. Man, if you thought that was detailed you should read the thead I started in the Logic forum (Godel etc.)! You'll notice I quit repling in that one early on, they just kept arguing over almost unrelated semantics! I ended up just thinking what I already thought before I asked. It might have been better placed in one of the physics forums, I couldn't decide.
EDIT: PS: It just occurred to me that you may have been being sarcastic, in which case I feel like the fool I am...
 
  • #5
just finished feynman's QED.
1. virtual particles are particles that, as Jonathan said pop in and out of existence without you seing them. let's say you have one photon which is supposed to go from A to B. most of the times, meaning the greatest probability amplitude is that it goes straight from A to B. But that's not all, experiments counting photons going from A to B say. It can also go from A to B but passing through any C point in space, even though C is not on the direct path from A to B. These paths have a smaller probability, but they happen. Also on the road the photon may spontaneously break into an electron and a positron which later recombine to recreate the photon reaching B. It can also break into a moun-antimuon pair or other particle-antiparticle pair. These things can also happen, with an even smaller probability. If the distance from A to B is big it doesn't actually matter that the photon can go in other ways than straight from A to B. Only if you want to get all the decimals right. But if the distance from A to B is quite small, like a few wavelengths it does matter. When stuff becomes "quantum stuff" that's when it starts to matter.
2. negative mass is the same thing as negative energy, right? and both are something you may end up with by trying to determine the mass of a real particle from its QED behaviour (coupling constant). You usually get infinities. That's why they invented that thing called renormalisation.
 
  • #6
a) a virtual particle is the result of taking the uncertainty principle (i.e. ΔEΔt >= h/4π) into account when considering the conservation of mass/energy, this means that pairs of virtual particles may appear and disappear as long as they stay within the uncertainty given by the HUP.

b) The idea of the black hole swallowing negative mass virtual particles is only one model to describe Hawking radiation, there's been some disagreement about the ins and outs of this. A real particle cannot have negative mass, so I don't you can say much beyond that it reperesnts a negative flux of energy which results in a loss of mass in a black hole.
 
  • #7
Jonathan
"EDIT: PS: It just occurred to me that you may have been being sarcastic, in which case I feel like the fool I am..."

Ya, it was just sarcasm. :wink:

Thanks for the info guys, that made it all make more sense.
 
  • #8
Of Virtual Particles and Negative Mass...

Hi,

Have u heard of the Uncertainty relation between Energy and Time... It says that the energy transfer and the time taken for the Energy transfer cannot be determined simultaneously. So if the Energy transfer is going to take place really fast then it is not possible to measure this energy. So We can infact break the law of Conservation of energy by actually "creating" a situation where the Energy transferred is so quick that u don't realize that "THE LAW" has been violated. This is the principle of Virtual Particles. These are particles that are generated from nowhere and serve as "messengers of the field". i.e They are assumed to be the source of transfer of energy in a field. The Virtual Partciles are created and are destroyed instantaneously transferring their energy to the nearby space where a new virtual particle evolves and this goes on...
A Photon is a classical example of a virtual Particle... another example might be the Graviton...
 

1. What is Hawking Radiation?

Hawking Radiation is a type of radiation that is theorized to be emitted by black holes. It is named after the physicist Stephen Hawking who first proposed its existence.

2. How is Hawking Radiation formed?

Hawking Radiation is formed through a process called quantum tunneling, where particles are created near the event horizon of a black hole and one particle falls into the black hole while the other escapes as radiation.

3. Can Hawking Radiation be observed?

Currently, Hawking Radiation has not been observed directly. It is predicted to have a very low intensity due to the size of black holes, making it difficult to detect. However, there have been some experiments attempting to indirectly observe its effects.

4. What is the significance of Hawking Radiation?

Hawking Radiation is significant because it challenges the idea that black holes are completely black and do not emit any form of radiation. It also has implications for the eventual evaporation of black holes over time.

5. How does Hawking Radiation relate to the concept of black hole thermodynamics?

Hawking Radiation is a key component of black hole thermodynamics, which is a theory that treats black holes as thermodynamic systems with temperature and entropy. The existence of Hawking Radiation supports this theory and allows for the calculation of a black hole's temperature and entropy.

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