There are no black holes: Hawking
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Stephen Hawking|event horizon|black hole
Stephen Hawking has produced a "mind-bending" new theory that argues black holes do not actually exist.
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Stephen Hawking
has produced a "mind-bending" new theory that argues black holes do not
actually exist — at least not in the way we currently perceive them.
Instead, in his paper, Information Preservation and Weather Forecasting
for Black Holes, Hawking proposes that black holes can exist without
"event horizons" , the invisible cover believed to surround every black
hole. During a previous lecture, "Into the Black Hole" , Hawkins
described an event horizon
as the boundary of a black hole, "where gravity is just strong enough
to drag light back, and prevent it escaping" . "Falling through the
event horizon, is a bit like going over Niagara Falls in a canoe" , he
said. "If you are above the falls, you can get away if you paddle fast
enough, but once you are over the edge, you are lost. There's no way
back.
"As you get nearer the falls, the current gets faster. This means it pulls harder on the front of the canoe, than the back. There's a danger that the canoe will be pulled apart. It is the same with black holes."
But now, Hawking is proposing "apparent horizons" could exist instead, which would only hold light and information temporarily before releasing them back into space in "garbled form" , Nature has reported.
The internationally-renowned theoretical physicist suggests that quantum mechanics and general relativity remain intact, but black holes do not have an event horizon to catch fire.
His work attempts to address the "black-hole firewall paradox" first discovered by theoretical physicist Joseph Polchinski and his colleagues almost two years ago, when Polchinski and his team began investigating what would happen to an astronaut who fell into a black hole.
They hypothesised that instead of being gradually ripped apart by gravitational forces, the event horizon would be transformed into a "highly energetic region" , and anyone who fell in would hit a wall of fire and burn to death in an instant — violating Albert Einstein's theory of relativity.
In his paper, Hawking writes: "The absence of event horizons means that there are no black holes — in the sense of regimes from which light can't escape to infinity."
He told Nature jour nal: "There is no escape from a black hole in classical theory, but quantum theory, however, "enables energy and information to escape from a black hole."
Don Page, a physicist and expert on black holes at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada told Nature that "the picture Hawking gives sounds pretty reasonable" .
"You could say that it is radical to propose there's no event horizon" , he said. "But these are highly quantum conditions, and there's ambiguity about what space-time even is, let alone whether there is a definite region that can be marked as an event horizon."
it is simple mr watson-sorry steve -even looking before crossing is predetermined
"As you get nearer the falls, the current gets faster. This means it pulls harder on the front of the canoe, than the back. There's a danger that the canoe will be pulled apart. It is the same with black holes."
But now, Hawking is proposing "apparent horizons" could exist instead, which would only hold light and information temporarily before releasing them back into space in "garbled form" , Nature has reported.
The internationally-renowned theoretical physicist suggests that quantum mechanics and general relativity remain intact, but black holes do not have an event horizon to catch fire.
His work attempts to address the "black-hole firewall paradox" first discovered by theoretical physicist Joseph Polchinski and his colleagues almost two years ago, when Polchinski and his team began investigating what would happen to an astronaut who fell into a black hole.
They hypothesised that instead of being gradually ripped apart by gravitational forces, the event horizon would be transformed into a "highly energetic region" , and anyone who fell in would hit a wall of fire and burn to death in an instant — violating Albert Einstein's theory of relativity.
In his paper, Hawking writes: "The absence of event horizons means that there are no black holes — in the sense of regimes from which light can't escape to infinity."
He told Nature jour nal: "There is no escape from a black hole in classical theory, but quantum theory, however, "enables energy and information to escape from a black hole."
Don Page, a physicist and expert on black holes at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada told Nature that "the picture Hawking gives sounds pretty reasonable" .
"You could say that it is radical to propose there's no event horizon" , he said. "But these are highly quantum conditions, and there's ambiguity about what space-time even is, let alone whether there is a definite region that can be marked as an event horizon."
it is simple mr watson-sorry steve -even looking before crossing is predetermined
ISSAC NEWTON SAID :-
"I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to
have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself
in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than
ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before
me."
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