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Scientific News Space Astronomy No More Black Holes?
No More Black
Holes?
By Phil Berardelli
ScienceNOW Daily News
If
new calculations are correct, the universe just got even stranger. Scientists at
Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, have constructed
mathematical formulas that conclude black holes cannot exist. The findings--if
correct--could revolutionize astrophysics and resolve a paradox that has
perplexed physicists for 4 decades.
On the surface, a black hole seems like a simple
concept. It's a point in space where gravity grows infinitely strong. At a
particular distance from the center of the hole--called the event
horizon--gravity is already so strong not even light can escape. So material
falls in never to be seen again. Calculations support this theory, but they also
support something stranger. In 1974, theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking
showed that thanks to quantum mechanics matter can escape black holes in
a tricky way. By random chance, a particle-antiparticle pair can flit into
existence straddling the event horizon. One partner falls into the hole, while
the other just barely makes it free. Because of this effect, dubbed Hawking
radiation, a black hole slowly evaporates, so that anything that enters is
eventually released over billions or even trillions of years. But how can black
holes be both airtight and leaky?
Physicist Lawrence Krauss and Case Western
Reserve colleagues think they have found the answer to the paradox. In a paper
accepted for publication in Physical Review D, they have constructed a
lengthy mathematical formula that shows, in effect, black holes can't form at
all. The key involves the relativistic effect of time, Krauss explains. As
Einstein demonstrated in his Theory of General Relativity, a passenger inside a
spaceship traveling toward a black hole would feel the ship accelerating, while
an outside observer would see the ship slow down. When the ship reached the
event horizon, it would appear to stop, staying there forever and never falling
in toward oblivion. In effect, Krauss says, time effectively stops at that point,
meaning time is infinite for black holes. If black holes radiate away their mass
over time, as Hawking showed, then they should evaporate before they even form,
Krauss says. It would be like pouring water into a glass that has no bottom. In
essence, physicists have been arguing over a trick question for 40 years.
Asked why then the universe nevertheless seems to
be full of black holes, Krauss replies, "How do you know they're black
holes?" No one has actually seen a black hole, he says, and anything with a
tremendous amount of gravity--such as the supermassive remnants of stars--could
exert effects similar to those researchers have blamed on black holes. "All
of our calculations suggest this is quite plausible," Krauss says.
Not so fast, says astronomer Kimberly Weaver of
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Although she
appreciates the physics the Case Western Reserve team is describing, the problem
is "we have never observed any events that would back this up." At the
site of the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, for example,
she says astronomers routinely observe what looks like interstellar material
disappearing without a trace. Also, no one has yet detected Hawking radiation,
which would be prerequisite evidence for black hole evaporation, Weaver says.
Publishing date: June 22, 2007
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