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About Those Fearsome Black Holes? Never Mind
NY Times ^ | July 22, 2004 | DENNIS OVERBYE

Posted on 07/22/2004 9:17:06 PM PDT by neverdem

Dr. Stephen W. Hawking threw in the towel yesterday, or at least an encyclopedia.

Dr. Hawking, the celebrated Cambridge University cosmologist and best-selling author, declared at a scientific conference in Dublin that he had been wrong in a controversial assertion he made 30 years ago about black holes, the fearsome gravitational abysses that can swallow matter and energy, even light.

As atonement he presented Dr. John Preskill, a physicist from the California Institute of Technology, with a baseball encyclopedia.

The encyclopedia was the stake in a famous bet Dr. Hawking and another Caltech physicist, Dr. Kip Thorne, made with Dr. Preskill in 1997. Dr. Hawking and Dr. Thorne said information about what had been swallowed by a black hole could never be retrieved from it; Dr. Preskill and many other physicists said it could. The winner was to get an encyclopedia, from which information could be freely retrieved.

This esoteric sounding debate is of great consequence to science, because if Dr. Hawking had been right, it would have violated a basic tenet of modern physics: that it is always possible to reverse time, run the proverbial film backward and reconstruct what happened in, say, the collision of two cars or the collapse of a dead star into a black hole.

Now, on the basis of a new calculation, Dr. Hawking has concluded that physics is safe and information can escape from a black hole. "I want to report that I think that I have solved a major problem in theoretical physics," he told his colleagues, according to a transcript of his remarks.

Standing in front of television cameras, as well as an auditorium full of physicists, Dr. Preskill said he had always dreamed that there would be witnesses when Dr. Hawking conceded, but "this really exceeds my expectations," according to an account by The Associated Press.

Dr. Hawking's new calculation was received by other physicists with reserve. They cautioned that it would take time to understand it. Some of them emphasized that a long line of work by various theorists in recent years suggested that information could escape from black holes.

"Until Stephen's recent reversal, he was about the only person still getting it wrong," said Dr. Leonard Susskind, a theorist at Stanford.

Dr. Hawking spoke yesterday at the 17th International Conference of General Relativity and Gravitation. He was added to the program at the last minute, only two weeks ago, after sending a note to the organizers that he had solved the problem.

His dramatic timing seems sure to add to his legend. Dr. Hawking, 62, has been confined to a wheelchair for decades by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, and speaks through a voice synthesizer hooked to a computer on which he types one letter at a time.

Nevertheless, he has been one of the world's leading experts on gravity, traveling the world constantly, training generations of graduate students at Cambridge and writing books like the popular "Brief History of Time." He has also married twice and fathered three children, and appeared on "The Simpsons" and "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

Theorists have worried about the fate of information in black holes since the 1960's. In 1974, Dr. Hawking stunned the world by showing that when the paradoxical quantum laws that describe subatomic behavior were taken into account, black holes should leak and eventually explode in a shower of particles and radiation.

The work was, and remains, hailed as a breakthrough in understanding the connection between gravity and quantum mechanics, the large and the small in the universe.

But there was a hitch, as Dr. Hawking pointed out. The radiation coming out of the black hole would be random. As a result, all information about what had fallen in - whether it be elephants or donkeys - would be erased. In a riposte to Einstein's famous remark that God does not play dice, rejecting quantum uncertainty, Dr. Hawking said in 1976, "God not only plays dice with the universe, but sometimes throws them where they can't be seen."

That was a violation of quantum theory, which says that information is preserved, and quantum theory is a foundation of all modern physics.

Dr. Susskind, who along with Dr. Gerard 't Hooft of the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands was among those who rose to the defense of quantum theory, said, "Stephen correctly understood that if this was true it would lead to the downfall of much of 20th-century physics."

The notion that information is always preserved has gained credence from recent results in string theory, which hopes to produce a Theory of Everything that would explain all the forces of nature.

Work by several theorists, including Dr. Andrew Strominger and Dr. Cumrun Vafa, both of Harvard, and Dr. Juan Maldacena, now at the Institute for Advanced Study, has contributed to a strange new view of the universe as a kind of hologram, in which the information about what happens inside some volume of space is somehow encoded on the surface of its boundary.

In such a picture, "there is no room for information loss," Dr. Maldacena explained. But, he added, it does not explain what Dr. Hawking did wrong in 1974 or how information does get out of the black hole.

In his new calculation, Dr. Hawking said that because of quantum uncertainty, one could never be sure from a distance that a black hole had really formed. There is no way to discriminate between a real black hole and an apparent one.

In the latter case an event horizon, the putative point of last return, could appear to form and then unravel; in that case the so-called Hawking radiation that came back out would not be completely random but would have subtle correlations and thus could carry information about what was inside.

According to quantum theory, both possibilities - a real black hole and an apparent one - coexist and contribute to the final answer. The contribution of the no-black-hole possibilities is great enough to suffice to allow information to escape, Dr. Hawking argued.

Another consequence of his new calculations, Dr. Hawking said, is that there is no baby universe branching off from our own inside the black hole, as some theorists, including himself, have speculated.

"I'm sorry to disappoint science fiction fans, but if information is preserved there is no possibility of using black holes to travel to other universes,'' he said yesterday. "If you jump into a black hole, your mass energy will be returned to our universe, but in a mangled form, which contains the information about what you were like, but in an unrecognizable state."

The new results are hardly likely to be the last word, either about the black hole information problem or about black-hole travel. Few physicists agree with the approach Dr. Hawking is using in his new calculation. Nobody knows how to weigh the different possibilities in such a quantum calculation, said Dr. Sean Carroll of the University of Chicago.

In conceding the bet, Dr. Hawking offered Dr. Preskill a cricket encyclopedia but said that Dr. Preskill, being "all American,'' refused. So Dr. Hawking had a copy of "Total Baseball: The Ultimate Baseball Encyclopedia" flown in.

Dr. Hawking's partner in the bet, Dr. Thorne, is sticking to his guns for now. Dr. Hawking commented, "If Kip agrees to concede the bet later, he can pay me back later."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: blackholes; quantummechanics
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1 posted on 07/22/2004 9:17:11 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: fourdeuce82d; El Gato; JudyB1938; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Robert A. Cook, PE; lepton; LadyDoc; ...

PING


2 posted on 07/22/2004 9:22:00 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem

Is that the times original headline? If so it's completely ridiculous.

Although if a ny times reporter or its editorial staff were willing to take a trip to a harmless black hole, I'd chip in a few bucks for the ride.


3 posted on 07/22/2004 9:25:11 PM PDT by flashbunny (Help prevent stupidity. Please remember to spay and neuter your celebrities. Thank you.)
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To: neverdem

hrmn...
always wondered what happens when a singularity gets "full"


4 posted on 07/22/2004 9:26:27 PM PDT by King Prout ("Thou has been found guilty and convicted of malum zambonifactum most foul... REPENT!)
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To: neverdem

Hawking was wrong, yeah. So are those who swallow that silly 'big bang' theory.

How big of us to think we know what's what.


5 posted on 07/22/2004 9:28:11 PM PDT by pantseatflyer
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To: neverdem

Odd that this coincides with the apparent retrieval of information from Sandy Berger's pants. A new universal constant?


6 posted on 07/22/2004 9:31:10 PM PDT by atomic conspiracy (A few words for the media: Julius Streicher, follow his path, share his fate.)
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To: King Prout

So I guess the Black Hole kinda hurls eventually. A case of Cosmic gluttony I suppose. :)


7 posted on 07/22/2004 9:35:02 PM PDT by Search4Truth (When a man lies he murders some part of the world.)
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To: atomic conspiracy

LOL


8 posted on 07/22/2004 9:36:34 PM PDT by neverdem (Xin loi min oi)
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To: neverdem
"If you jump into a black hole, your mass energy will be returned to our universe, but in a mangled form, which contains the information about what you were like, but in an unrecognizable state."

Hawking lends theortical support to the theory I've been working on about Michael Moore. It's been obvious for some time that Michael Moore is an over-sized mass that consumes everything around him. But the problem was explaining how such a thing could radiate bogus information.

I'm glad Hawking did this, because I'm not very good at math.


9 posted on 07/22/2004 9:40:51 PM PDT by Nick Danger (Neutrinos have mass? I didn't even know they were Catholic.)
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To: King Prout

If it is full of enough Bud, would it soon be a "naked singularity"?


10 posted on 07/22/2004 9:52:37 PM PDT by GladesGuru (In a society predicated upon liberty, it is essential to examine principles - -)
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To: Search4Truth

It has just been something I have long wondered at - I mean, if the conditions inside the event horizon are as horrific as math tells us they must be, wouldn't gravity itself sooner or later break down, causing the singularity to blowed up reeeeeal good?


11 posted on 07/22/2004 9:53:23 PM PDT by King Prout ("Thou has been found guilty and convicted of malum zambonifactum most foul... REPENT!)
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To: GladesGuru

gad, what an image.


12 posted on 07/22/2004 9:53:52 PM PDT by King Prout ("Thou has been found guilty and convicted of malum zambonifactum most foul... REPENT!)
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To: King Prout

I suppose this puts a dampener on the theory that the matter goes into another dimension, as some have theorized.

Whenever theorists or physicists speak in terms of infinites, you know they don't have a clue.


13 posted on 07/22/2004 10:05:12 PM PDT by Search4Truth (When a man lies he murders some part of the world.)
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To: neverdem
For a moment there I was thinking about the 'black hole' was reffering to the (near) empty space between the ears of most Democrat politicians (Schumer, Gore, Dashole, Clintons, Fine-Swine, Kerry, Edwards etc, etc, etc.

Also the BLack Hole could be that empty space where a normal human heart would be; but in their case its become VERY darkened by evil.

14 posted on 07/22/2004 10:09:43 PM PDT by prophetic
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To: King Prout

The relationship of gravity inside the event horizon would in essence break down in a Newtonian or relativistic system, as once past it your velocity should be above c. Once above c, relativity no longer works - so then what? Are you no longer able to be observed by someone in our reference plane? Of course you can't. So then it falls to the rules of quantum, and at this point it's anybody's guess.


15 posted on 07/22/2004 10:16:58 PM PDT by datura (The Difference Between a Democrat and a Communist Is????)
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To: pantseatflyer
"How big of us to think we know what's what."

What we know now, is only a drop in the largest ocean on earth.

16 posted on 07/22/2004 10:32:13 PM PDT by Windsong (FighterPilot)
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To: neverdem; snopercod
Black holes are created by any item that exceeds the speed of light relative to when and where you are at, your time zone, if you will.

When you look out into space, and you see a black hole, you are looking up the exit pipe, so to speak, of an item that is departing from your frame of reference, at a speed exceeding that of light.

In a similar vein, what is called a collapsing star, is a star born anew in another time zone. While we watch it collapse, some guy in the other time zone is watching it appear and can't wait to name it for himself.

Intergalactic intellectual property trial lawyers are foaming at the bit and can't wait to profit from these disputes.

17 posted on 07/22/2004 10:45:01 PM PDT by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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To: First_Salute

Black holes are what happens when a star eats itself.

White holes are what happens when another universe farts.

Wormholes are black holes that can't make up their minds.


18 posted on 07/22/2004 10:50:07 PM PDT by WestVirginiaRebel (Never misunderestimate our Commander-In-Chief.)
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To: neverdem; snopercod
information about what happens inside some volume of space is somehow encoded on the surface of its boundary

Well now that's interesting, because all of what you see, what appears to be the volume of your space, is also the surface.

Everything that we see, is the surface of the volume of our space, what we call our universe.

There may or may not be a beach ball perimeter to it, but that is not the surface; it is only part of the surface.

A black hole is a hole in the surface.

19 posted on 07/22/2004 10:57:12 PM PDT by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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To: WestVirginiaRebel

So white holes are black holes suffering from Irritated Gravity Syndrome as a result of ingesting worms?


20 posted on 07/22/2004 10:59:33 PM PDT by First_Salute (May God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary.)
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