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Stronger Gravity Black Holes and the Curvature of Space-Time Black Holes The name “black hole” was coined by John Archibald Wheeler, of Princeton University, in the 1960s. At that time, such objects were matters of idle speculation, not real astrophysical research. Here we see Wheeler with Einstein and Yukawa, a year before Einstein’s death. The Extreme Case If an object of mass M shrinks to a size given by the Schwarzschild radius: RS = 2 G M / c2 the escape velocity is c (the speed of light), and neither light nor material particles can escape. Some Numbers Note that Rs is proportional to the mass. For the Earth, Rs = about 1 cm For the Sun (300,000 times more massive), Rs = 300,000 cm = 3000 m = 3 km For a ten-solar-mass star, Rs = 30 km (bigger than a neutron star!) It Doesn’t Stop There! Once the material attains this small size and enormous density, nothing can stop the further complete infall. Gravity overwhelms all resistance; the ‘fall’ continues. Singularity As noted, the collapse continues within the Schwarzschild radius, to zero volume and infinite density: a singularity – or at least that’s what the mathematics tells us. What ‘really’ happens there? Physics can not yet tell us: we need a theory of quantum gravity, or perhaps string theory. http://cjwainwright.co.uk/maths/physicscube/ What is a Singularity? First, consider burrowing through the Earth. It may not be possible for practical reasons (for example, the extreme pressure overwhelms our tools) but there is nothing in principle that disallows this. You can imagine making your way, inch by inch. But in the Singularity… In a singularity like a black hole, there is no ‘connection’ from one side to the other through the central point. Imagine climbing down one side of a well, intending later to climb back up the other – and then discovering there is no bottom! Infinitely Deep! The points on opposite sides of the hole are always separated by an infinite distance, if you choose to go through the hole. (You can of course always go around the hole, out where space is not so distorted.) This is because of the infinite elasticity (the ‘stretchiness’) of space itself. Trapping People in a Singularity Running Down is Easy …but try climbing! http://www.physics.queensu.ca/~hanes/Movies/Climbing-Dunes.mp4 The Behaviour of Light Note that light follows curved paths, and can even orbit the black hole. An Important Proviso: The Material has Vanished - But is Not Gone Note that the mass is still there! For objects far away, it has exactly the same gravitational influence as it always did. Black Holes Do Not Suck! Suction is a manifestation of pressure. The motor and fan expel air out the top, creating a vacuum in the canister. Air in the room rushes in through the hose, carrying dust and dirt with it. The Fate of the Earth If the Sun became a black hole, the Earth would not suddenly get ‘sucked into’ it. There is no external pressure to push it into the Sun in the way that air in your bedroom pushes the dust into the vacuum cleaner. And the gravity we feel would not change. Very close to the black hole, however, the situation is different. Here’s a Thought Experiment Move to the moon for your own safety. Now compress the Earth to the size of an olive, so it collapses to a black hole. What next? The moon would continue in its orbit, around an invisible Earth. If you looked directly towards the shrunken Earth, the new black hole would have an occasional pronounced effect on beams of light from stars directly behind it. (“lensing”) Nothing Else Would Change… But you’d never be able to go home! There’s no way to ‘re-expand’ the Earth. Now Suppose You (A Keen Scientist!) Decide to Look at the Black Hole ‘Close Up’ This is not a good idea! Let’s Consider Some Numbers Right now your body is more than 6 million metres from the centre of the Earth. This gives rise to an overall net downward gravitational force that you experience as your weight. But Near a Shrunken Earth Suppose you descend towards the grape-sized black hole until your feet are just one metre from it. 1 metre What gravitational pull would you now experience? Obviously a large one, because you are closer to all the Earth’s mass, but just how big? Inverse-Square Law The atoms in your feet are now only 1 meter from the material in the hole, rather than 6 million meters. Because of the inverse-square law, the force on the atoms in your feet would be 36 trillion times ( = 6 million x 6 million) as strong as what they are feeling right now. That’s Not Necessarily a Problem! If all your atoms felt the same force, and if you were coasting freely through space, no problem! (Touching down on a surface would hurt, though! Your own weight would crush you.) But Your Head is Farther Away! If you are of average height (~1.6 metres), your head would be about 2.6 metres from the hole. So your head does not feel as strong a force. What Matters is the Difference! Both these forces are unimaginably strong, and pull you towards the hole. But the gravitational force on the atoms in your feet is fantastically stronger than the force on the atoms in your head. You’d get ripped apart, atom by atom. Spaghettification! This is a tidal effect. See the ASTR 101 notes for a reminder of tides.] Meet a Brave Astronaut Find a volunteer willing to fall into the black hole for the sake of science. Watch her go, and ask her to report regularly by radio. What would we see and learn? Two Very Different Perceptions Her experience: quick and nasty spaghetti! Our observation: infinitely drawn out, with a slow fade to invisibility. Her Signals Arrive Ever More Slowly (‘News From the Pit’) The last few escaping photons… …take forever to get out, and barely make it at all, losing almost all their energy