People-Safe Event Horizon: Can Alice & Bob Experiment?

In summary, it is possible for Alice and Bob to find themselves on opposite sides of an event horizon and perform experiments without fear of being mangled by tidal or differential gravitation effects. However, they would have to be in free fall and the larger the black hole, the better. If they were to do an entanglement experiment and compare results, they would still see the expected correlations, but the information would never leave the black hole. It is possible to do the experiment with a real black hole, but the results cannot be published. In terms of reaching the singularity, it depends on the size of the black hole, with a larger black hole giving more time before reaching the singularity. It is also possible for Bob to reach
  • #1
Swamp Thing
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Is is possible for Alice and Bob to find themselves on opposite sides of an event horizon and go about their experiments, without the fear that one of them might be mangled to death by tidal / differential gravitation effects?
 
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  • #2
By "opposite sides", do you mean one inside and one outside?
By "go about their experiments", do you mean "together"? Or separately?
They would have to be in a hovering spacelab. It is possible to hover near a SMBH (though not at or inside the EH). The gravitational gradient is what kills you, and SMBHs have a small gradient.
 
  • #3
Swamp Thing said:
Is is possible for Alice and Bob to find themselves on opposite sides of an event horizon and go about their experiments, without the fear that one of them might be compacted to death by tidal / differential gravitation effects?
Yes, as long as they're in free fall instead of trying to hover, and (somewhat counterintuitively) the larger the black hole the better. When you're falling into a black hole, what tears you apart is the difference between the force on your feet and your head - the absolute strength of those forces is irrelevant as long as you're in free fall. You could fall through the event horizon of a supermassive black hole without even noticing.

Of course if they're in free fall they don't have very long to perform their experiments. And the outer experimenter won't be able to receive any signals from the inner experimenter until he has also fallen through the horizon.
 
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  • #4
DaveC426913 said:
It is possible to hover near a SMBH. The gravitational gradient is what kills you,
The gradient is what will kill you if you're free-falling. If you're hovering, it's the proper acceleration needed to hover that will kill you, and that tends towards infinity no matter the size of the black hole.
 
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  • #5
Nugatory said:
the outer experimenter won't be able to receive any signals from the inner experimenter until he has also fallen through the horizon.
If they do an entaglement experiment, and then they compare notes after Bob has caught up with Alice on the same side of the horizon, will their results be as per expected correlations?
 
  • #6
Swamp Thing said:
If they do an entaglement experiment, and then they compare notes after Bob has caught up with Alice on the same side of the horizon, will their results be as per expected correlations?
Whether or not it does, that information will never leave the black hole.

But I don't see why entanglement would be affected by an event horizon.

The event horizon is only a mathematical object; not a real object. A person falling toward the EH will pass that point without any changes. The only way they would now they've crossed it is to calculate where it is, knowing the mass of the BH.

Nothing special happens there. The only thing that happens is that light, emitted from anything inside that point won't eventually make its way out into the universe. The scientist inside the EH will never know that either.
 
  • #7
Swamp Thing said:
If they do an entaglement experiment, and then they compare notes after Bob has caught up with Alice on the same side of the horizon, will their results be as per expected correlations?
No one has actually done that experiment because we don't have any convenient black holes to try it... but according to our current understanding of the physics, we'd get the predicted quantum mechanical correlations. Consider that we have done Bell tests with spacelike-separated measurements, and we can imagine putting our observers on opposite sides of a Rindler horizon so that we're a coordinate transformation away from that case.
 
  • #8
Nugatory said:
No one has actually done that experiment because we don't have any convenient black holes to try it... but according to our current understanding of the physics, we'd get the predicted quantum mechanical correlations.
Would it be possible to do the experiment in any useful way even if we did have a handy black hole? Presumably you wouldn't be able to test the correlation without meeting up, so the outer observer would have to fall into the hole, and publication of the results would be problematic. Otherwise there'd have to be a way to communicate two ways across an event horizon.
 
  • #9
Swamp Thing said:
Is is possible for Alice and Bob to find themselves on opposite sides of an event horizon and go about their experiments, without the fear that one of them might be mangled to death by tidal / differential gravitation effects?

With a large enough black hole the tidal effects at the horizon can be made small. But the observer inside the black hole has a finite proper time to live before being destroyed in the singularity, and it's most likely that the tidal forces will mangle the one on the interior before they reach the singularity. How long it takes to reach the signularity depends on the size of the black hole, the larger the better. For some representative numbers, IIRC a galactic mass black hole (1 billion solar masses) gives times on the order of a few hours to reach the central singularity from the horizon.
 
  • #10
Ibix said:
Would it be possible to do the experiment in any useful way even if we did have a handy black hole?

Sure. You just can't publish the results. :wink:
 
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  • #11
Vanadium 50 said:
Sure. You just can't publish the results.

So it's publish or perish, eh?
 
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  • #12
Swamp Thing said:
So it's publish or perish, eh?
Literally, so I understand, which is why I was asking whether I was misunderstanding something.
 
  • #13
Swamp Thing said:
If they do an entaglement experiment, and then they compare notes after Bob has caught up with Alice on the same side of the horizon, will their results be as per expected correlations?
DaveC426913 said:
The event horizon is only a mathematical object; not a real object.

I'm beginning to wonder -- if Alice and Bob started out on different sides of the EH, can Bob ever get across to Alice's "side" merely by coasting/falling, without having to accelerate a lot? Perhaps there would always be "a" horizon (as opposed to "the") horizon between Alice and Bob?

To avoid existential anxieties and unpleasant images, maybe let's forget about Alice and Bob but just consider particles participating in events. So two particles that start out timelike separated, as they coast along, can they evolve into a spacelike separated configuration?
 
  • #14
Swamp Thing said:
I'm beginning to wonder -- if Alice and Bob started out on different sides of the EH, can Bob ever get across to Alice's "side" merely by coasting/falling, without having to accelerate a lot? Perhaps there would always be "a" horizon (as opposed to "the") horizon between Alice and Bob?

The answers would be just as valid as at any other radius.
Ultimately, they could, if they were of a mind, calculate at what radius they would need to exceed some velocity (such as c) in order to not be able to catch up to each other, and decide that that is a defining radius, but again, it's not a "real" boundary. Nothing happens there, all it does is rule out some of your future paths.

I'm trying to think of some other examples of boundaries - perhaps the point of no-return for a rocket trying to go to Mars and back. You can certainly compute a distance for any trajectory it might take, and graph that to make a 2D boundary in space that shows its limit before it can't return, but it's not like the rocket knows where the boundary is. All it does is rule out some future paths of the rocket (such as any that eventually get it back to Earth orbit).
 
  • #15
Swamp Thing said:
I'm beginning to wonder -- if Alice and Bob started out on different sides of the EH, can Bob ever get across to Alice's "side" merely by coasting/falling, without having to accelerate a lot?
Yes, as long as they don't start too far apart.
(Some care is needed to properly define "too far apart" here because there's no sensible way of specifying both positions at the same time. We need to make a statement about their respective worldlines instead of initial positions).
To avoid existential anxieties and unpleasant images, maybe let's forget about Alice and Bob but just consider particles participating in events. So two particles that start out timelike separated, as they coast along, can they evolve into a spacelike separated configuration?
As asked, that question doesn't make sense because the interval (whether timelike, spacelike, or lightlike) is between two events, while a particle defines an entire worldline. You can't speak about the interval between two particles; you have to pick a particular event on each worldline and then calculate the interval between those two events.
 
  • #16
Nugatory said:
As asked, that question doesn't make sense

How about this... At some moment in Bob's proper time, he is able to receive Alice's light cone as they both fall towards the black hole. At a later moment in his own proper time, he sees Alice's light cone red-shifting and disappearing altogether, so he knows that Alice has crossed the event horizon. (It may not make sense to ask exactly "when" she, er, passed over).

Question now is, if Bob continues to fall freely, will there be a third moment in his proper time when Alice's light cone fades back in through the spectrum and becomes visible again? Or would he have to actively chase Alice by accelerating himself towards the BH in order to have a chance of glimpsing her again?
 
  • #17
Swamp Thing said:
How about this... At some moment in Bob's proper time, he is able to receive Alice's light cone as they both fall towards the black hole. At a later moment in his own proper time, he sees Alice's light cone red-shifting and disappearing altogether, so he knows that Alice has crossed the event horizon. (It may not make sense to ask exactly "when" she, er, passed over).

Question now is, if Bob continues to fall freely, will there be a third moment in his proper time when Alice's light cone fades back in through the spectrum and becomes visible again? Or would he have to actively chase Alice by accelerating himself towards the BH in order to have a chance of glimpsing her again?
Alice does not fade out and disappear. If Bob were hovering, then light he received from Alice would be increasingly red-shifted as she neared the horizon, and she would fade to invisibility at the horizon. But Bob isn't hovering, he's free-falling along with Alice so the red-shift between them is negligible.

This is the same situation as if Bob were falling feet-first through the event horizon. There is a time (using coordinates in which he is at rest, appropriate for any free-faller) when his feet have passed through the horizon and his head hasn't yet done so. He's looking down, watching his feet. Is there ever a time when he can't see his feet? No.
 

Related to People-Safe Event Horizon: Can Alice & Bob Experiment?

1. What is the People-Safe Event Horizon?

The People-Safe Event Horizon is a hypothetical boundary that represents the limit of safety for humans in an experiment. It is the point at which an experiment becomes too dangerous for people to participate in safely.

2. Who are Alice and Bob in this experiment?

Alice and Bob are commonly used names in science to represent hypothetical individuals. In this experiment, they are used to represent two people who are participating in the experiment.

3. What is the purpose of the Alice & Bob Experiment?

The purpose of the Alice & Bob Experiment is to test the limits of human safety in a controlled environment. This can help scientists understand the potential risks and dangers of certain experiments, and develop safety protocols to protect people.

4. How is the People-Safe Event Horizon determined?

The People-Safe Event Horizon is determined by a combination of factors, including the nature of the experiment, the potential risks involved, and the safety measures in place. It is often determined through risk assessments and safety evaluations.

5. What are some ways to ensure the safety of participants in the Alice & Bob Experiment?

Some ways to ensure the safety of participants in the Alice & Bob Experiment may include following strict safety protocols, using protective equipment, and having emergency plans in place. It is also important for the experiment to be monitored by trained professionals and for participants to be fully informed and consent to the experiment.

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