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Frozen Stars - Black holes may not be bottomless pits after all
Scientific American ^ | July 7, 2003 | George Musser

Posted on 07/10/2003 6:09:58 AM PDT by Damocles

July 07, 2003
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Frozen Stars
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Black holes may not be bottomless pits after all
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By George Musser
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Demolishing stars, powering blasts of high-energy radiation, rending the fabric of spacetime: it is not hard to see the allure of black holes. They light up the same parts of the brain as monster trucks and battlebots do. They explain violent celestial phenomena that no other body can. They are so extreme, in fact, that no one really knows what they are.

Most researchers think of them as microscopic pinpricks, the remnants of stars that have collapsed under their own weight. But over the past couple of years, a number of mavericks have proposed that black holes are actually extended bodies, made up of an exotic state of matter that congeals, like a liquid turning to ice, during the collapse. The idea offers a provocative way of thinking about quantum gravity, which would unify Einstein's general theory of relativity with quantum mechanics.

In the textbook picture, the pinprick (or singularity) is surrounded by an event horizon. The horizon is not a physical surface, merely a conceptual one, and although it marks the point of no return for material plummeting toward the singularity, relativity says that nothing special happens there; the laws of physics are the same everywhere. For quantum mechanics, though, the event horizon is deeply paradoxical. It allows information to be lost from our world, an act that quantum theory forbids. "What you have been taught in school is almost certainly wrong, because classical black hole spacetimes are inconsistent with quantum mechanics," says physicist George Chapline of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

The new conceptions of black holes eliminate the event horizon altogether. The basic idea is that there does, in fact, exist a force that could halt the collapse of a star when all else fails. That force is gravity itself. In matter with certain properties, gravity switches from being an attractive force to a repulsive force. Such a material, going by the name "dark energy," is thought to be driving the acceleration of cosmic expansion.

Last year physicists Pawel O. Mazur of the University of South Carolina and Emil Mottola of Los Alamos National Laboratory reasoned that a pocket of the stuff might freeze out, like ice crystals, during the collapse of a star. The result, which they call a gravastar, would look like fried ice cream: a crust of dense but otherwise ordinary matter stabilized by a curious interior. The crust replaces what would have been the event horizon.

Another proposal goes further. It conjectures not only that dark energy would freeze out but that relativity would break down altogether. The idea comes from a dark-horse contender for quantum gravity, the proponents of which are struck by the resemblance between the basic laws of physics and the behavior of fluids and solids (also known as condensed matter). In many ways, the equations of sound propagation through a moving fluid are a dead ringer for general relativity; sound waves can get trapped in the fluid much as light gets trapped in a black hole. Maybe spacetime is literally a kind of fluid.

What makes this approach so interesting is that the behavior of condensed matter is collective. The details of individual molecules hardly matter; the system's properties emerge from the act of aggregation. When water freezes, the molecules do not change, but the collective behavior does, and the laws that apply to liquids no longer do. Under the right conditions, a fluid can turn into a superfluid, governed by quantum mechanics even on macroscopic scales. Chapline, along with physicists Evan Hohlfeld, Robert B. Laughlin and David I. Santiago of Stanford University, has proposed that a similar process happens at event horizons. The equations of relativity fail, and new laws emerge. "If one thinks of spacetime as a superfluid, then it is very natural that in fact something physical does happen at the event horizon--that is, the classical event horizon is replaced by a quantum phase transition," Chapline says.

For now, these ideas are barely more than scribbles on the back of an envelope, and critics have myriad complaints about their plausibility. For example, how exactly would matter or spacetime change state during the collapse of a star? Physicist Scott A. Hughes of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology says, "I don't see how something like a massive star--an object made out of normal fluid, with fairly simple density and pressure relations--can make a transition into something with as bizarre a structure as a gravastar." Mainstream theories of quantum gravity are far better developed. String theory, for one, appears to explain away the paradoxes of black holes without abandoning either event horizons or relativity.

Observationally, the new conceptions of black holes could be hard to distinguish from the classical picture--but not impossible. Gravitational waves should reveal the shape of spacetime around putative black holes. A classical hole, being a simple object without a true surface, has only a couple of possible shapes. If one of the gravitational-wave observatories now going into operation finds a different shape, then the current theories of physics would be yet another thing in the universe to get torn to shreds by a black hole.

 



TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: blackholes
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Interesting concept.
1 posted on 07/10/2003 6:09:59 AM PDT by Damocles
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To: All
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2 posted on 07/10/2003 6:11:09 AM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: Damocles
A true black hole is the most interesting object in astronomy. Think of it as an immensely, unimaginably powerful aggregation of nothingness.
3 posted on 07/10/2003 6:13:21 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop
Think of it as an immensely, unimaginably powerful aggregation of nothingness.

I've used that definition to describe the Democratic party for years...

4 posted on 07/10/2003 6:19:34 AM PDT by Damocles (sword of...)
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To: goldstategop
"Think of it as an immensely, unimaginably powerful aggregation of nothingness."

Sounds like Al Gore's mind.

5 posted on 07/10/2003 6:21:57 AM PDT by sd-joe
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To: Damocles
Mmmmm - fried ice cream...
6 posted on 07/10/2003 6:25:49 AM PDT by trebb
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To: Damocles
"Frozen Stars - Black holes may not be bottomless pits after all"

There is only one bottomless pit:


7 posted on 07/10/2003 6:27:45 AM PDT by shadowman99
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To: shadowman99
Oh sweet Moses...my eyes...my EYES!!
8 posted on 07/10/2003 6:30:59 AM PDT by Damocles (sword of...)
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To: Damocles
These guys should write a paper, do the math and THEN talk to a reporter after publishing.
9 posted on 07/10/2003 6:34:55 AM PDT by Centurion2000 (We are crushing our enemies, seeing him driven before us and hearing the lamentations of the liberal)
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To: Damocles
Goes back to the old Hoover Vaccummatic theory of the Universe. Boils down to "Black Holes Suck"
10 posted on 07/10/2003 6:37:03 AM PDT by Conan the Librarian (I am a Librarian. I don't know anything....I just know where to look it up.)
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To: Centurion2000
Ahh, where's the fun in that. Wild speculation is always more enjoyable...
11 posted on 07/10/2003 6:37:27 AM PDT by Damocles (sword of...)
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To: Damocles
"Sh*t!"

-- "Stargate" writer

12 posted on 07/10/2003 6:38:32 AM PDT by pabianice
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To: Damocles
Bump.
13 posted on 07/10/2003 6:42:51 AM PDT by DoctorMichael (>>>>>My mind is a Black Hole before my morning coffee<<<<<)
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To: Damocles
"I don't see how something like a massive star... can make a transition into something with as bizarre a structure as a gravastar."

As I recall, black holes were also considered bizarre and beyond liklihood when they were first proposed.

I wonder, though, if a molecular cloud has the same basic properties as a gravastar, yet in growing over time it has become more stable?

14 posted on 07/10/2003 6:43:54 AM PDT by theDentist (Liberals can sugarcoat sh** all they want. I'm not biting.)
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To: Damocles
I'm glad no one mentioned Oprah on this thread
15 posted on 07/10/2003 7:19:06 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: aruanan
PM alert!

"Maybe spacetime is literally a kind of fluid"

Like the ether theories proposed?
16 posted on 07/10/2003 7:49:55 AM PDT by Gary Boldwater
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To: Gary Boldwater
"Maybe spacetime is literally a kind of fluid"

Fluidic Space Alert! Species 8472 incoming!

</star trek voyager mode>

17 posted on 07/10/2003 8:05:13 AM PDT by MalcolmS (Do Not Remove This Tagline Under Penalty Of Law!)
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To: Gary Boldwater
Yup, back to the ol' 'aether' after 100 years! I'm taking this opportunity to publicly declare:
"It really _IS_ turtles all the way down!"
Another twenty years, and I'm gonna look like a GENIUS!
18 posted on 07/10/2003 8:07:05 AM PDT by Dick Steele ("All my life, I've had just ONE dream: To achieve my many goals." Simpson)
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To: shadowman99
How'd you get a picture of my ol' lady?
19 posted on 07/10/2003 8:18:25 AM PDT by sandydipper (Never quit - never surrender!)
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To: theDentist
As I recall, black holes were also considered bizarre and beyond liklihood when they were first proposed.

Black holes were first proposed long, long before Einstein and Hawkings were even born.
20 posted on 07/10/2003 10:35:10 AM PDT by aruanan
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