by Chris Peterson » Sun May 05, 2024 2:51 pm
Christian G. wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 2:44 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 1:45 pm
Christian G. wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2024 1:27 pm
I suppose the "everything vanishes" part is a manner of speaking. Everything falls out of sight perhaps, but nothing "vanishes", rather what's left of the star's mass is added to the black hole's mass, increasing very slightly the event horizon radius, and dare I add: increasing ever so slightly the elusive singularity's volume? Say from the size of an atomic nucleus to a minuscule notch above? Surely a 5 solar mass BH singularity has a different volume than a 50 solar mass one?
If a black hole is, indeed, a singularity, then by definition it has zero volume. No matter what its mass. As we have no physics at this point that can describe the details of the actual black hole, though... who knows?
I appreciate your answer! I imagine mathematicians being comfortable with singularities, since they deal with them on paper, but physicians less so, because they deal with nature! Singularities have zero volume, "by definition", in other words on paper! But are they realistic? By which I don't mean intuitive - I mean: can such singularities correspond to a physical reality, however weird? I'm over my head here but the idea that we can find a "singularity" in nature almost seems like a category mistake.
In any case I remember reading here a while ago that a black hole may be "some form of elementary particle", I think it was you who said that! (apologies if my memory's wrong). Should you feel like elaborating, please don't hesitate!
I prefer not to assess what is possible in nature with what my intuition (something evolved over millions of years of observing macroscopic nature and avoiding falling from trees) tells me makes sense. I'm fine with black holes being true singularities in the mathematical sense, or being particles (and modern physics doesn't even treat particles as particles, but rather, as complex fields... again defying intuition). Or being something else. For now, we're quite far along in our ability to describe the effect of a black hole on its surrounds, how it distorts spacetime, how it behaves gravitationally, what's going on at the event horizon. But the object itself? Still waiting for new physics there.
[quote="Christian G." post_id=338812 time=1714920259 user_id=147043]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=338809 time=1714916750 user_id=117706]
[quote="Christian G." post_id=338808 time=1714915676 user_id=147043]
I suppose the "everything vanishes" part is a manner of speaking. Everything falls out of sight perhaps, but nothing "vanishes", rather what's left of the star's mass is added to the black hole's mass, increasing very slightly the event horizon radius, and dare I add: increasing ever so slightly the elusive singularity's volume? Say from the size of an atomic nucleus to a minuscule notch above? Surely a 5 solar mass BH singularity has a different volume than a 50 solar mass one?
[/quote]
If a black hole is, indeed, a singularity, then by definition it has zero volume. No matter what its mass. As we have no physics at this point that can describe the details of the actual black hole, though... who knows?
[/quote]
I appreciate your answer! I imagine mathematicians being comfortable with singularities, since they deal with them on paper, but physicians less so, because they deal with nature! Singularities have zero volume, "by definition", in other words on paper! But are they realistic? By which I don't mean intuitive - I mean: can such singularities correspond to a physical reality, however weird? I'm over my head here but the idea that we can find a "singularity" in nature almost seems like a category mistake.
In any case I remember reading here a while ago that a black hole may be "some form of elementary particle", I think it was you who said that! (apologies if my memory's wrong). Should you feel like elaborating, please don't hesitate!
[/quote]
I prefer not to assess what is possible in nature with what my intuition (something evolved over millions of years of observing macroscopic nature and avoiding falling from trees) tells me makes sense. I'm fine with black holes being true singularities in the mathematical sense, or being particles (and modern physics doesn't even treat particles as particles, but rather, as complex fields... again defying intuition). Or being something else. For now, we're quite far along in our ability to describe the effect of a black hole on its surrounds, how it distorts spacetime, how it behaves gravitationally, what's going on at the event horizon. But the object itself? Still waiting for new physics there.