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Suppose a neutrino is seen travelling so fast that its Lorentz gamma factor is 100,000. It races past an old, no longer active neutron star, narrowly missing it. As far as the neutrino is concerned, it is the NEUTRON STAR that is moving at extreme speed, & its mass is 100,000 times larger than 2 solar masses. Therefore, from the speeding neutrino's perspective, the neutron star should appear to be a black hole definitely large enough to trap the neutrino.

So how come the speeding neutrino continues its travel right past the old stellar remnant?

Is there an agreed name for this question or paradox?

Qmechanic
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    Related: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/3436/2451 – Qmechanic May 26 '12 at 17:06
  • Cool question. Let me make sure I understand you though. With black-holes, there is a radius where light can orbit the black hole with the right impact-parameter. Your question is, if a neutrino travels by a neutron star at almost $c$ at the right impact parameter, it should have an orbit for that star, right? – kηives May 26 '12 at 17:19
  • @Qmechanic's link is the full answer to the "[it] should appear to be a black hole" part of this question (namely that, no, it shouldn't). I'm not sure if the rest of the question is different or not. Opinions from the relativity experts among us? – dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten May 26 '12 at 17:40
  • A boosted object does not collapse because there is momentum as well as energy, and both are gravitating--- you can't use estimates of energy only when objects are fast moving. This is addressed by answers to the previous question. – Ron Maimon May 26 '12 at 20:35
  • Late comment to a now quite old question, but it occurs to me that $\gamma = 100000$ relative it's creation frame is just an ordinary walk in the park for a neutrino. Neutrino masses are of order one tenth of an electron volt and beta-decay neutrino energies are of order $\mathrm{MeV}$. – dmckee --- ex-moderator kitten Jun 27 '17 at 16:59

3 Answers3

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Have a look at Can a black hole form due to Lorentz contraction?

This isn't exactly the same as your question, but the answer is the same. It's popularly believed that the mass is the only thing that determines whether a black hole will form or not, but this isn't true. Einstein's equation relates the curvature to a quantity called the stress-energy tensor:

$$G_{\alpha\beta} = 8\pi T_{\alpha\beta}$$

where $G_{\alpha\beta}$ is the Einstein tensor that describes the curvature and $T_{\alpha\beta}$ is the stress-energy tensor. The mass contributes only one component (out of ten) to the tensor. In the rest frame of the neutron star the mass is the dominant component, but when you boost the neutron star the other components are non-zero and they balance out any relativistic change in the mass.

See in particular Ron Maimon's comment to my previous answer for more info about the other components of the stress-energy tensor.

John Rennie
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See answers to my question If two ultra-relativistic billiard balls just miss, will they still form a black hole? for a closely related situation with a different answer. This raises the question whether the combination of neutron star and neutrino in the center of mass has enough total mass (energy) inside the "hoop" to form a black hole.

Jim Graber
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The laws which govern the "increasing of mass" due to moving are not just the same as simply increasing of $m$ by adding material. Namely, the moving mass never turns into black hole if it is not black hole when still.

Suzan Cioc
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