What is the Connection Between Hawking Radiation and Dark Matter?

In summary: Its partner immediately gets "spaghettified" by the black hole elongated as it plunges to the center.This part is just wrong.As elementary particles of the same type are indistinguishable, how do you tell if a particle escaping is the same as another particle that was somewhere else before?Its partner immediately gets "spaghettified" by the black hole elongated as it plunges to the center.This part is just wrong.
  • #1
JohnLuck
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The way I understand Hawking radiation is that black holes decay by sucking in anti particles from the virtual particle pairs that are created right at its event horizon. I also understand that these anti particles reduce the mass of the black hole instantly when crossing the event horizon? And that these things are so in Hawking theory because it is the consequence of the laws of entropy and the information conservation law. Is this correctly understood?
 
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  • #2
JohnLuck said:
The way I understand Hawking radiation is that black holes decay by sucking in anti particles from the virtual particle pairs that are created right at its event horizon.
Particles and antiparticles alike.

I also understand that these anti particles reduce the mass of the black hole instantly when crossing the event horizon?
There is no "instantly", especially for black holes where time passes at completely different rates for different points. If you compare the mass before and afterwards, you'll see it decreased.

And that these things are so in Hawking theory because it is the consequence of the laws of entropy and the information conservation law.
Entropy, yes. It is unclear if Hawking radiation is relevant for information conservation (and if information is conserved at all).
 
  • #3
Are the particle and antiparticle produced from vacuum energy inside the event horizon? If so, I'm not sure it's correct to say that these events happen "right at the event horizon". Would it be more correct to say that the event begins just inside the event horizon, even though the two resulting particles end up on opposite sides?

John, do you believe that the black hole eventually vanishes because antimatter is sucked in which annihilates the matter inside the event horizon of the black hole?
 
  • #4
They are not inside, otherwise they could not get out. "Just outside" is a better description.
 
  • #5
I thought that HR depends on quantum tunneling. From Wikipedia's article on HR: "In another model, the process is a quantum tunnelling effect, whereby particle-antiparticle pairs will form from the vacuum, and one will tunnel outside the event horizon."
 
  • #6
JohnLuck said:
The way I understand Hawking radiation is that black holes decay by sucking in anti particles from the virtual particle pairs that are created right at its event horizon. I also understand that these anti particles reduce the mass of the black hole instantly when crossing the event horizon? And that these things are so in Hawking theory because it is the consequence of the laws of entropy and the information conservation law. Is this correctly understood?

There's an intuitive way of describing Hawking radiation, which is in terms of the black hole sucking in virtual particles. Then there is a more technical explanation in terms of describing particle creation/annihilation from the point of view of an accelerated reference frame. I'm not 100% certain that the intuitive explanation has been shown to be equivalent (in some sense) to the technical explanation.
 
  • #7
If you look close enough, every simplified model will have its limits. Based on the first post, I guess we should not go into too much detail here.
 
  • #8
Adrian B said:
I thought that HR depends on quantum tunneling. From Wikipedia's article on HR: "In another model, the process is a quantum tunnelling effect, whereby particle-antiparticle pairs will form from the vacuum, and one will tunnel outside the event horizon."

No, they form outside the EH. Even tunneling won't allow you to escape from inside the EH. It's the ultimate roach motel.
 
  • #9
phinds said:
Even tunneling won't allow you to escape from inside the EH. It's the ultimate roach motel.

So articles like this one are just plain wrong? In the article, Andew Hamilton (an astrophysicist at the University of Colorado) describes how a particle spawned inside the EH can escape via tunneling.
 
  • #10
Adrian B said:
So articles like this one are just plain wrong? In the article, Andew Hamilton (an astrophysicist at the University of Colorado) describes how a particle spawned inside the EH can escape via tunneling.
As elementary particles of the same type are indistinguishable, how do you tell if a particle escaping is the same as another particle that was somewhere else before?

Its partner immediately gets "spaghettified" by the black hole elongated as it plunges to the center.
This part is just wrong.
 
  • #11
Adrian B said:
So articles like this one are just plain wrong? In the article, Andew Hamilton (an astrophysicist at the University of Colorado) describes how a particle spawned inside the EH can escape via tunneling.

Well, I'm not an expert by any means but from all I have read, yes, he's wrong. I notice that he says "particles are also waves" which is probably just 'cause he's writing for a lay audience, but I think a QM guy is really more likely to point out that a "particle" is not a particle OR a wave, as those terms are understood, but rather is a quantum object that will act like a particle if you measure for particle properties and act like a wave if you measure for wave properties. This is NOT simple semantics and if he in fact doesn't understand it (and again, I think he probably does understand it but is dumbing down his discourse) then nothing else he says is very trustworthy. Also, as mfb pointed out, the concept of a quantum object getting sphagettified doesn't make sense.

Also, and unfortunately I can't give you a citation but I learned about it here on this forum, Hawking himself has said that this whole business of "virtual particle pairs" is bogus and was simply a "dumbing down" that HE did because it was the only way he could think of to state in English what his math actually says about what is now called Hawking Radiation.
 
  • #12
phinds said:
Also, and unfortunately I can't give you a citation but I learned about it here on this forum, Hawking himself has said that this whole business of "virtual particle pairs" is bogus and was simply a "dumbing down" that HE did because it was the only way he could think of to state in English what his math actually says about what is now called Hawking Radiation.

The quote is from his original paper on Hawking radiation, in the introduction:

Steven Hawking said:
It should be emphasized that these pictures of the mechanism responsible for the thermal emission and area decrease are heuristic only and should not be taken too literally... The real justification of the thermal emission is the mathematical derivation given in Section (2) for the case of an uncharged non-rotating black hole.

From here is you can get by the paywall: http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02345020
 
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  • #13
king vitamin said:
The quote is from his original paper on Hawking radiation, in the introduction:

Thank you.
 
  • #14
If a black hole absorbs either an anti or normal particle, why is not still a net gain of mass?
 
  • #15
Imager said:
If a black hole absorbs either an anti or normal particle, why is not still a net gain of mass?
Dark matter is not made of anti-<anything>. I think maybe you ought to read up on just what dark matter IS.
 
  • #16
Imager said:
If a black hole absorbs either an anti or normal particle, why is not still a net gain of mass?
The "particle" it absorbs is not a regular particlem it is virtual - if you want to assign an energy value to it, it will be negative (including the rest energy of the particle!).
 
  • #17
phinds said:
Dark matter is not made of anti-<anything>. I think maybe you ought to read up on just what dark matter IS.

Hi Phinds, I don't mean to imply Hawking radiation is related to dark matter. If they are related, then I admit to being more confused than usual. :)
 
  • #18
Imager said:
Hi Phinds, I don't mean to imply Hawking radiation is related to dark matter. If they are related, then I admit to being more confused than usual. :)

Nuts. I think I got confused about what thread I was in. Sorry. :oops:
 

What is Hawking radiation?

Hawking radiation is a theory proposed by physicist Stephen Hawking in 1974. It suggests that black holes emit radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon, causing them to eventually evaporate.

How does Hawking radiation work?

Hawking radiation is thought to occur when a pair of particles is created near the event horizon of a black hole. One particle falls into the black hole, while the other escapes as radiation. This process causes the black hole to lose mass and eventually evaporate.

What is the significance of Hawking radiation?

Hawking radiation is significant because it challenges the idea that black holes are completely black and do not emit any radiation. It also has implications for the ultimate fate of black holes and the information paradox.

Can Hawking radiation be observed?

Currently, Hawking radiation has not been directly observed in nature. However, there are ongoing experiments and observations that may provide evidence for its existence in the future.

What are some potential implications of Hawking radiation?

One potential implication of Hawking radiation is that it could lead to the eventual disappearance of black holes. It also has implications for our understanding of the laws of thermodynamics and the behavior of matter and energy in extreme conditions.

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