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Old 17-10-2014, 10:00 AM
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Black Hole Question

They are out there, apparently up to 20 billion solar masses, maybe larger,
Past the event horizon how much is known.
It seems the consensus suggests a singularity where the matter resides ..infinitely small and infinitely dense.
Is that view a math construct only or is it sciences view of reality.
I find it impossible to imagine 20 billion solar masses compacted to a point smaller than the head of a pin.
I could imagine an object of some reasonable size having the mass observed but to suggest something infinitely small seems unrealistic.
What is at the core of a black hole?
Do scientists believe to find a singularity or something more akin to a pulsar..
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Old 17-10-2014, 11:09 AM
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Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
I find it impossible to imagine 20 billion solar masses compacted to a point smaller than the head of a pin.
I could imagine an object of some reasonable size having the mass observed but to suggest something infinitely small seems unrealistic.
What is at the core of a black hole?
Do scientists believe to find a singularity or something more akin to a pulsar..
You should consider a black hole to be the entire space inside the Schwarzschild radius.

The Schwarzschild radius is proportional to the mass with a proportionality constant involving the gravitational constant and the speed of light:

r_s=2*G*m/(c**2)

where:
r_s is the Schwarzschild radius;
G is the gravitational constant (6.67384e-11);
m is the mass of the object;
c is the speed of light in vacuum (299792458).

For 20 billion solar masses that is 5.9e13 metres or 395 Au
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Old 17-10-2014, 11:29 AM
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Didn't a physicist recently say black holes are impossible
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Old 17-10-2014, 03:04 PM
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Thank you Andrew.
I have up until recently considered a black hole as you suggest.
Such that a super massive black hole may engulf our solar system, at least the event horizon would be of such size.
It was pondering the core or the singularity that I started to think about.
It seems to me that irrespective of the size of the black hole when considered at the event horizon the core would be the same size for all irrespective of the S radius..which I think is the event horizon..maybe I am off the mark there I don't know if the two are the same.
My question is I suppose..Does mainstream view the core as a singularity as reality or is it their way of saying they deal with the core as a point rather than possibly a larger compact body.
Say for a super massive black hole is the core seen as a point or say a larger object say as large as Mercury but very dense.
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Old 17-10-2014, 03:09 PM
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There is no way to observe the core so I expect it is determined by what the math suggests.
Is it reasonable to suggest nothing can prevent the collapse such that a singularity is the only conclusion.
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Old 17-10-2014, 03:26 PM
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Didn't a physicist recently say black holes are impossible
People say all sorts of things but mainstream has accepted black holes and offer many observations suggesting their existence.
Recently it has been reported black holes may not exist however it appears to me that the physist only suggested some stars may not form a black hole when experiencing collapse.
Her research was sensationalised by a journalist and she has yet to publish in a peer revieved journal...so she has not said they do not exist.
It is clear objects with massive gravitational influence have been observed and mainstream believe they are black holes.
My question is about their make up not if they have found any..because clearly observations show many galaxies appear to have a super massive black hole at the galactic.centre.
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Old 17-10-2014, 03:36 PM
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I'm all for them. Make for great movies
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Old 18-10-2014, 09:24 AM
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Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
Thank you Andrew.
I have up until recently considered a black hole as you suggest.
Such that a super massive black hole may engulf our solar system, at least the event horizon would be of such size.
It was pondering the core or the singularity that I started to think about.
It seems to me that irrespective of the size of the black hole when considered at the event horizon the core would be the same size for all irrespective of the S radius..which I think is the event horizon..maybe I am off the mark there I don't know if the two are the same.
My question is I suppose..Does mainstream view the core as a singularity as reality or is it their way of saying they deal with the core as a point rather than possibly a larger compact body.
Say for a super massive black hole is the core seen as a point or say a larger object say as large as Mercury but very dense.
Hello Alex,

As mithrandir pointed out a BH is defined as an object whose physical size is less than S (Schwarzschild) radius.
The physical singularity is an artefact or problem in GR.
GR is a scale dependent theory and breaks down at small scales, the physical singularity is an example.

In Quantum mechanics a physical singularity cannot exist.
A simple analogy using astrophotography can help explain this.
Stars are considered theoretical point sources but when starlight passes through the Earth's atmosphere the point source jumps around and is smeared over a small area. When a star is imaged it is not a point source but has a definable size.
Space time at small scales "behaves" in the same way.

We can think of black holes as being compact bodies but only from our perspective of space time outside the the S radius.
Space time inside the S radius is very different. For example an object travelling away from a BH inside the S radius is moving backwards in time, spatial dimensions have time like characteristics and time has spatial like characteristics.

The fact is we don't know what's going on inside the S radius.

Regards

Steven
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Old 18-10-2014, 09:29 AM
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Thank you Steven that helped immensely.
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Old 18-10-2014, 12:35 PM
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The fact is we don't know what's going on inside the S radius.

Regards

Steven
Agree with all this, but a slight expansion on the last point.

It is certainly true that we don't know what is going on inside S, in the sense that it is not something we have observed, and potentially can't observe even in principle, and so it's entirely possible that our current understanding of this is not entirely correct (ie some aspects of GR will require some modification). Of course this is a subset of the broader truth that we know that both GR and QM can't be completely correct and that one or both will need some adjustment.

That said, I don't think it's fair to say that we don't know in the sense of being entirely clueless. We know that GR is a very good description of most things. In a large enough black hole, well away from the singularity, space locally doesn't look different from space outside a black hole. Therefore it is reasonable to assume that it's pretty unlikely that GR isn't a good description of it.

I do get annoyed when people (not directed at you, Steven, or anyone else in particular) suggest that just because we don't perfectly understand some extreme phenomenon, that means all science is up for grabs and scientists can't be trusted on anything.

Harrumph.
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Old 18-10-2014, 02:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Dave2042 View Post
Agree with all this, but a slight expansion on the last point.

It is certainly true that we don't know what is going on inside S, in the sense that it is not something we have observed, and potentially can't observe even in principle, and so it's entirely possible that our current understanding of this is not entirely correct (ie some aspects of GR will require some modification). Of course this is a subset of the broader truth that we know that both GR and QM can't be completely correct and that one or both will need some adjustment.

That said, I don't think it's fair to say that we don't know in the sense of being entirely clueless. We know that GR is a very good description of most things. In a large enough black hole, well away from the singularity, space locally doesn't look different from space outside a black hole. Therefore it is reasonable to assume that it's pretty unlikely that GR isn't a good description of it.

I do get annoyed when people (not directed at you, Steven, or anyone else in particular) suggest that just because we don't perfectly understand some extreme phenomenon, that means all science is up for grabs and scientists can't be trusted on anything.

Harrumph.
Hello Dave,

About the only the thing we do know as you have stated is that for a sufficiently massive black holes the local space time on either side of the horizon is essentially equivalent.

The problem is how one measures space and time inside the horizon.
For example if you ask astrophysicists how they would measure the distance between the singularity to a spacecraft orbiting outside the event horizon of a BH, they will give a convoluted answer known as the circumferential distance. In other words they can only calculate the distance through the circumference of the orbiting spacecraft.

Suppose the orbiting astronauts attempted to directly measure the distance using a "gigantic" measuring stick. Outside the event horizon each pointer on the measuring stick is separated by a distance interval but not separated in time as a clock at each pointer is measuring the same time.
What happens when the measuring stick is passed over the horizon.
Assuming the stick isn't destroyed by tidal forces, part of the stick outside the horizon is still measuring distance at the same time.
The part of the stick inside the horizon, something very strange is happening, if the mathematics describing what is occurring inside the horizon is correct, then the pointers are no longer separated by distance but are separated by time.
Hence it is impossible to directly measure the distance as time and space inside the horizon is very different from the astronaut's own frame of reference.

The point is we don't understand what's going on inside a BH because we can't even measure what we trying to define.

I think the point Alex was making is "what is it like on the inside" rather than what is it like from the perspective of someone looking in.

I have absolutely no doubt on the existence of BHs given the overwhelming evidence.

Regards

Steven
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Old 19-10-2014, 09:39 AM
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Originally Posted by sjastro View Post
Hello Dave,

About the only the thing we do know as you have stated is that for a sufficiently massive black holes the local space time on either side of the horizon is essentially equivalent.

The problem is how one measures space and time inside the horizon.
For example if you ask astrophysicists how they would measure the distance between the singularity to a spacecraft orbiting outside the event horizon of a BH, they will give a convoluted answer known as the circumferential distance. In other words they can only calculate the distance through the circumference of the orbiting spacecraft.

Suppose the orbiting astronauts attempted to directly measure the distance using a "gigantic" measuring stick. Outside the event horizon each pointer on the measuring stick is separated by a distance interval but not separated in time as a clock at each pointer is measuring the same time.
What happens when the measuring stick is passed over the horizon.
Assuming the stick isn't destroyed by tidal forces, part of the stick outside the horizon is still measuring distance at the same time.
The part of the stick inside the horizon, something very strange is happening, if the mathematics describing what is occurring inside the horizon is correct, then the pointers are no longer separated by distance but are separated by time.
Hence it is impossible to directly measure the distance as time and space inside the horizon is very different from the astronaut's own frame of reference.

The point is we don't understand what's going on inside a BH because we can't even measure what we trying to define.

I think the point Alex was making is "what is it like on the inside" rather than what is it like from the perspective of someone looking in.

I have absolutely no doubt on the existence of BHs given the overwhelming evidence.

Regards

Steven
I think we are coming at this from slightly different angles. I was simply thinking about the theory side of things (ie does the maths of GR apply), whereas you seem to be thinking more practically about what one would experience inside S, which I'd agree is a whole lot less certain.

That said, I still feel a bit more 'optimistic' than you. If I recall correctly (GR classes 20 years ago), the 'standard' way of looking at this is that in the frame of reference of the observer inside the black hole, nothing much changes as you cross the event horizon, other than that you become unable to stop moving towards the singularity. That seems comprehensible to me.

Interested to hear if that's not actually the case.
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Old 19-10-2014, 09:49 AM
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Didn't a physicist recently say black holes are impossible
No is was a mathematician, and she didn't say that there were impossible but unlikely
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Old 19-10-2014, 10:05 AM
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Steven you are correct...I want to know what the core looks like close up.
How to somehow visualise a singularity and how matter behaves therein.
A godseyeview explained to a five year old child.
A speculation at best based on what we know and delivered via analogy.

And Dave never let folk annoy you there is nothing gained .
I live in an area where folk are anti vaccination, believe in crystal healing, pyramid power, tarot cards etc.

You just have to leave them be and accept they are and will remain like that ..Don't raise your blood pressure to accommodate their beliefs.
Science at least works upon the unknown seeking a testable reality and it matters not if the uninformed bleet one way or another. What matters is maintaining your health and happiness ..annoyances destroys both.
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Old 19-10-2014, 10:36 AM
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I'm all for them. Make for great movies
I see your point but perhaps Hollywood causes problems similar to the sensational reporting of most science such that the message taken away by casual viewers or readers is not the message science delivered.
I read the science news first then try and read the paper..if you find that there is no paper well remember a journalist may have cherry picked to get only exciting bits so his story becomes well read. Even as a layman I can get a grip on what the researchers have said which often is different from the journalists report.
Next I seek forums where the matter is being discussed by real scientists and get a feel for how they regard the research.
Take the recent news...black holes don't exist..well the research has not been peer reviewed, and the research did not say ...black holes don't exist...it seemed to say no more than..in certain situations Hawking radiation may act to prevent the formation of a black hole...
Then when I read the science forums you find out more...background on the physicist etc...well guess what I am able to conclude the original reporting was very misleading.
Years of research supported by peer reviewed papers is rarely..if ever..overturned by one journalist.
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Old 19-10-2014, 10:49 AM
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Hi Simon I also called her a physist sorry about that.
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Old 19-10-2014, 12:18 PM
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I think we are coming at this from slightly different angles. I was simply thinking about the theory side of things (ie does the maths of GR apply), whereas you seem to be thinking more practically about what one would experience inside S, which I'd agree is a whole lot less certain.
It's case of making sense of the mathematics and making predictions that can be supported or refuted through observation or experiment.
BH properties such as mass, charge or spin are characteristics that we can measure as observers outside the horizon.
Knowledge of BHs at a fundamental level is completely lacking.
We don't know what BHs are made out of.
Do BHs violate the Pauli Exclusion Principle?
Then there is space-time inside the S-radius. Since the time like and spatial like terms of the Schwarszchild metric become interchanged the velocity of particles can exceed c with all the associated logical paradoxes that would occur outside the horizon.

Quote:
That said, I still feel a bit more 'optimistic' than you. If I recall correctly (GR classes 20 years ago), the 'standard' way of looking at this is that in the frame of reference of the observer inside the black hole, nothing much changes as you cross the event horizon, other than that you become unable to stop moving towards the singularity. That seems comprehensible to me.
Interested to hear if that's not actually the case.
That may be comprehensible but let's replace the observer with a photon just inside the horizon that has been scattered away from the singularity. According to the maths, the photon is now travelling back into it's own past before it scattered.... but the scattering process sent it in that direction hence a logical paradox.

Space time inside the horizon is a very weird place.

Regards

Steven

Last edited by sjastro; 19-10-2014 at 12:34 PM.
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Old 19-10-2014, 12:36 PM
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Originally Posted by xelasnave View Post
I see your point but perhaps Hollywood causes problems similar to the sensational reporting of most science such that the message taken away by casual viewers or readers is not the message science delivered.
I read the science news first then try and read the paper..if you find that there is no paper well remember a journalist may have cherry picked to get only exciting bits so his story becomes well read. Even as a layman I can get a grip on what the researchers have said which often is different from the journalists report.
Next I seek forums where the matter is being discussed by real scientists and get a feel for how they regard the research.
Take the recent news...black holes don't exist..well the research has not been peer reviewed, and the research did not say ...black holes don't exist...it seemed to say no more than..in certain situations Hawking radiation may act to prevent the formation of a black hole...
Then when I read the science forums you find out more...background on the physicist etc...well guess what I am able to conclude the original reporting was very misleading.
Years of research supported by peer reviewed papers is rarely..if ever..overturned by one journalist.
Reporters only ever cherry pick. To incite opposing pov and often argument over debate.

I love science especially anything to do with space and getting off this rock and out of this solar system.
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Old 01-11-2014, 05:44 PM
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Now I've started to think of this black hole thing and the question that leap to mind is:-
Now as I understand it Black Holes are the result of super compaction, until even photons cannot escape the from the gravity well imposed by them. Ok so that makes there escape velocity, black Holes, at c or above. Now the photon is a massless particle/wave. Also the graviton is a massless particle/wave that does escape the black hole so it's velocity must be greater that c. "Nothing can exceed c", so the conclusion I come to is that c is not unbreakable or that gravity is not propagated by particles/waves but by ???????????? What?
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Old 01-11-2014, 09:41 PM
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If a photon has no mass why would gravity affect it?
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