Why can gravity escape from a black hole?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of virtual particles and their relationship to black holes, particularly in the context of gravity and phenomena like Hawking radiation. Participants explore theoretical implications, the nature of virtual particles, and their role in quantum gravity and related effects.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that virtual particles can escape a black hole, suggesting a mechanism for gravity's influence beyond the event horizon.
  • Others argue that virtual particles are merely computational tools and not real physical entities, questioning their applicability in describing physical phenomena.
  • A participant challenges the validity of using virtual particles in modern physics, comparing them to outdated models like classical Newtonian mechanics.
  • There is a discussion on the status of quantum gravity, with some noting the lack of a testable theory and the role of virtual particles in existing quantum field theories.
  • Concerns are raised about the interpretation of phenomena like Hawking radiation and the Casimir effect, with some participants questioning whether virtual particles are necessary to explain these effects.
  • Another participant clarifies that the experiments related to the Casimir effect do not necessarily rely on the concept of vacuum fluctuations as a theoretical interpretation.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the nature and role of virtual particles, with no consensus reached on their validity or applicability in explaining gravitational phenomena associated with black holes.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the dependence on definitions of virtual particles, the unresolved status of quantum gravity theories, and the varying interpretations of experimental results related to vacuum fluctuations.

askmathquestions
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One of the leading theories of physics is that forces are mediated by virtual particles.

Well, it seems as though these virtual particles can escape a black hole. Why is that?
 
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askmathquestions said:
Well, it seems as though these virtual particles can escape a black hole. Why is that?
Virtual particles, of course, are just a computational tool, not real measurable physical objects. That's why they are called virtual, after all. Since they are just mathematical objects, not physical ones, they can "do" many things that physical objects can't. One of the things that virtual particles can "do", which real particles can't, is traveling backwards in time. Another thing that virtual particles can "do", which real particles can't, is traveling faster than light. Both traveling backwards in time and traveling faster than light are ways to escape from a black hole. But since virtual particles are just mathematical objects, the escapes of virtual particles are escapes of mathematical objects, no physical objects escape from the black hole.
 
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Demystifier said:
...since virtual particles are just mathematical objects, the escapes of virtual particles are escapes of mathematical objects, no physical objects escape from the black hole.
Isn't this, at its essence, the antithesis of science?
It's a model ... of a phenomenon that ... poorly models the phenomenon.

We throw those out and look for better models, yes?

OK, OK, I know, that, "as a computational tool it makes the math a lot easier", and "it models the phenomenon well in a majority of cases, just not all." Right? Kind of like classical Newtonian mechanics works in most cases.

But aren't virtual particles at the core of quantum gravity? And if they're a crummy model then surely they should not be used in any modern model. It would be like someone trying to revive classical Newtonian mechanics and stretch it to describe hyper-velocities and hyper-masses.

No?
 
DaveC426913 said:
aren't virtual particles at the core of quantum gravity?
We don't know, because we don't have a testable theory of quantum gravity.

It's worth noting, though, that virtual particles aren't even necessarily "at the core" of other quantum field theories. They are a calculational tool, which we use because we either (a) don't know how to do the calculation any other way, or (b) don't have the time available to do the calculation any other way.
 
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askmathquestions said:
One of the leading theories of physics is that forces are mediated by virtual particles in a particular approximate calculational scheme, perturbation theory, that works for many problems but does not work for all, and has to be adjusted by schemes like renormalization even for the problems for which it works.
See the bolded qualifiers. They're very important.
 
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So what is Hawking radiation if virtual particles are a purely made-up phenomena? Why did Stephan Hawking becomes so accredited for that radiation that it's named after him? What about the Casimir effect's "vacuum fluctuations"? Did physicsts lie when they said they reported the Casimir effect? Or, instead of calling all those physicists liars, might some remote form of virtual particles be a feasible model?
 
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askmathquestions said:
what is Hawking radiation if virtual particles are a purely made-up phenomena?
Not virtual particles.

askmathquestions said:
What about the Casimir effect's "vacuum fluctuations"?
The experiments verifying that the Casimir effect exists did not report "vacuum fluctuations". That's a theoretical interpretation, and a very limited one. See further comments below.

askmathquestions said:
Did physicsts lie when they said they reported the Casimir effect?
Of course not, and nobody is claiming they did.

askmathquestions said:
Or, instead of calling all those physicists liars, might some remote form of virtual particles be a feasible model?
We have a series of Insights articles on this; this one is probably a good place to start:

https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/misconceptions-virtual-particles/
 
The OP question has been answered. Thread closed.
 
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