Questions tagged [black-holes]

A black hole is a region of spacetime from which nothing can escape. More formally, the future light cone of any observer within the black hole is completely contained in the black hole, and the black hole region is not within the past light cone of any observer that goes to spatial infinity in an infinite amount of time.

Brief Summary

Intuitively, black holes are compact regions of spacetime from which nothing, not even light, can escape. They were originally conceived within by considering a body so massive that the escape velocity at its surface would be larger than the speed of light (and hence they would be seen as black), but their study became much more profound within the framework of .

Black Holes in General Relativity

The first black hole solution of the Einstein Field Equations, the main equations of General Relativity, was the Schwarzschild solution, which describes a spherically symmetric, vacuum spacetime. By comparing the solution to the predictions of Newtonian gravity, one finds out that it is characterized by a parameter $M$ which can be identified as the mass of a spherical body at the center of the spherical system of coordinates. Spacetime is then described by the metric $$\textrm{d}s^2 = - \left(1 - \frac{2M}{r}\right)\textrm{d}t^2 + \left(1 - \frac{2M}{r}\right)^{-1}\textrm{d}r^2 + r^2 \textrm{d}\theta^2 + r^2 \sin^2\theta \textrm{d}\phi^2,$$ where geometrical units, with $G = c = 1$, are employed.

One can then notice the presence of two disturbing features of this : it is ill-defined at $r = 2M$ and at $r = 0$. While the former was eventually seen to be a coordinate singularity, just like the issues one has at $\theta = 0$ and $\theta = \pi$ due to the use of spherical coordinates, the latter was deemed problematic and possibly unphysical.

The reason for the belief that the solution could be unphysical is because the high degree of symmetry could indeed conduct the appearance of singularities, as it already did in Newtonian gravity. For example, a spherically symmetric cloud of dust in Newtonian gravity will collapse at the origin and form a singularity due to the matter achieving infinity density at that point. However, if the cloud was rotating in the slightest bit, the centrifugal effect would keep the singularity from forming. Hence, it was not clear whether the singularity on the Schwarzschild solution was a mere accident due to symmetry or an actual prediction of General Relativity.

While the Schwarzschild solution was proposed in the 1910s, the matter would only be settled in the 1960s, with the work of R. Penrose and S. Hawking concerning the singularity theorems, which employed global techniques to show that the formation of singularities is indeed a robust prediction of General Relativity and not a mere consequence of symmetry considerations. Penrose would later be awarded half of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics due to his work on this.

There are more black hole solutions within General Relativity. Usually, one considers the stationary solutions (i.e., those that possess a time translation symmetry). If one assumes all matter on spacetime is comprised of electromagnetic fields, the no-hair theorems implies that the only possible solutions are the , the , and the (the latter having the remaining ones as special cases).

Astrophysical Considerations

Black holes can be formed by means of the gravitational collapse of a sufficiently massive star when it can continue interacting gravitationally with its surroundings. For example, , such as LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA, have observed a number of black hole and neutron star mergers. Notice then that even though black holes do not emit light, they can be studied experimentally by means of their gravitational influence.

While this approach involved , there are also other possibilities. Analyzing the orbits of stars at the center of the Milky Way led to the discovery of the presence of a "supermassive compact object at the center of our galaxy." In the words, chosen by the Nobel Prize when justifying half of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics being awarded to Andrea Ghez and Reinhard Genzel for this discovery.

Furthermore, the presence of matter surrounding the black hole and the effects due to the black hole's massive gravity also provide a way of performing experimental observations. By exploiting this, the [Event Horizon Telescope] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_Horizon_Telescope) was able to take the first picture of a black hole.

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Can space be torn?

If space is warped by objects in space, and black holes are made of infinitely heavy objects, can space be torn by black holes?
user40752
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Why couldn't they take pictures of a closer black hole?

The latest photos of the M87 black hole capture light from around a black hole at the center of the Messier 87 galaxy, which is 16.4 Mpc ($5.06 \times 10^{20}$km) from our milky way. Why couldn't / didn't the scientists involved take photos of black…
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At what rate does a rotating black hole lose mass via Hawking Radiation?

I initially thought it was inversely proportional to the mass, but I think that's wrong because temperature is inversely proportional to mass. If someone could give the formula(s) for finding this that would be fantastic. I've searched around and…
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Can black holes have non-abelian charges?

I know a Black hole can have angular momentum, described by the Kerr metric. It can also have an electric charge, described by the Kerr-Newmann metric. I read it cannot have a non-abelian charge. I would like to know why.
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Moving black holes

What happens to the fabric of space in the wake of a moving black hole? Is space permanently deformed by a moving black hole or does it rebound as the black hole passes?
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Do black holes have a characteristic size?

First off, I know that a black hole can theoretically exist at any size, and I know about the Schwarzschild radius, etc. Snowflakes could also exist at just about any size, and they of course vary considerably in different environments. But there's…
chase
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How much of a star falls into a black hole?

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2011/04/05/astronomers-may-have-witnessed-a-star-torn-apart-by-a-black-hole/ A lot of the star in the disc, a lot of the star in the jets, precisely how much of the star actually falls into the black…
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How small are the smallest black holes?

How little mass can a black hole contain and still be a "stable" black hole? What would the diameter be, in terms of the event horizon?
xpda
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What makes a supermassive black hole move through space?

In this example of a Neutrino jet, it seems that the supermassive black hole moves around the space and meets up with a interstellar object sometimes. Source of the above image and a larger version. What force gives a supermassive black hole the…
mate64
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Charged Black holes - What is the Interest in those?

Here in this forum (and elsewhre) I read about "charged" black holes. What is the background for this questions? Is this more a question of theroretical interest? In "practice" :=) black holes should be neutral, because matter is neutral…
Georg
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Is extracting energy via the Penrose Process only possible with Kerr black holes?

I have been learning about extracting energy via the Penrose Process. Everything I read mentions leveraging the ergosphere of a rotating black hole. But the ergosphere and the mechanisms of extracting energy sound a lot like frame dragging. Is it…
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How can black hole interior theories be falsified?

How can any theory of the interior of black holes be falsified if the interior cannot be observed?
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How fast can a small black hole eat?

Edit: I'm not referring to the giants, but to the little ones that might or might not exist. First: https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/202290/264 We have this answer which limits the consumption rate to the speed of sound in the material at…
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Can a black hole bounce?

Is there a limit to the amount of matter that a black hole can accrete per second and if so could a certain sized black hole bounce off a dense enough surface?
Jitter
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Information about an expanding event horizon

Assume an observer sent a beam of photons close to an event horizon, say at some distance x (a distance far enough to avoid the photons falling in.) This light would still be observable, albeit red shifted and with it's path curved appropriately.…
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