Routes to formation of a black hole?

In summary, there are multiple ways for a black hole to form, including the collapse of a high-mass star, accretion onto a neutron star, and the merger of two neutron stars. However, there is still ongoing debate and research about the exact mechanisms and frequency of these events. Additionally, there is evidence that core collapse may not be the only route to black hole formation.
  • #1
bcrowell
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How many routes are there to the formation of a black hole? A high-mass star can evolve off the main sequence, then end up going supernova and leaving behind a black-hole remnant. In this thread https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=3062281 , Radrook and Jim Graber pointed out that there may be mechanisms of collapse that don't involve a supernova. Jim suggested that I search on arxiv.org for "accretion induced collapse," and indeed there were about a gazillion hits. Can anyone sort this out at all? Is anything known about the possible mechanisms of formation of supermassive black holes? At lower masses, is there an accretion/collapse mechanism and a separate collision mechanism?
 
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  • #2
Let me give an off the top of my head simple approximation. In a way, it's all accretion. Indeed, the main route to black hole formation is still thought to be when a massive star burns out its fuel and collapses, or "accretes onto its own center" if you will. This is thought to lead to a supernova in most or all cases, but in a minority of cases it just might collapse with only a weak explosion, or no significant explosion at all. The second most common route is when a neutron star in a binary accretes matter from its companion until it exceeds the Chandrasekar limit. Again this is thought to lead to a supernova in some cases, but could lead to a quiet collapse in others. This is still at least somewhat controversial, AFAIK. A third, slightly different case is when two neutron stars merge either by slow inspiral or just possibly, very rarely, by direct collision in a dense environment such as the center of a globular cluster. Once again, there is a possibility of an explosion or a more or less quiet collapse. The calculations are difficult and the final results are still disputed, I think. If some of these alternate scenarios are actually realized, they will be far less common than the main routes. Opinions are still changing, but that's my outsiders take on the current state of play.

Jim Graber
 
  • #3
Actually, that should be Oppenheimer-Volkoff limit, which is largest possible neutron star, rather than Chandrasekhar limit, which is largest possible white dwarf. Sorry.
Jim Graber
 
  • #4
Thanks, Jim. That's very informative!
-Ben
 
  • #6
Another unlikely but potential way a neutron star might collapse into a black hole is if a large neutron star has very high initial spin meaning the stars shape is an oblate spheroid and the volume of the star is greater than the same neutron star if it was static (the coordinate event horizon radius for a rotating star is also less than that of a static star). As the star slows done over millions of years, the interior density will increase as well the potential coordinate event horizon radius and there's a chance the star could collapse into a black hole, but the star would have to be on the brink of critical mass (~3 sol) with only the spin preventing collapse.
 

Related to Routes to formation of a black hole?

1. What is a black hole?

A black hole is a region in space where the gravitational pull is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. This happens when a large amount of matter is squeezed into a very small space.

2. How do black holes form?

Black holes can form through two main routes: stellar collapse and supermassive black hole formation. Stellar collapse occurs when a massive star runs out of fuel and its core collapses under its own gravity. Supermassive black holes, on the other hand, are thought to form in the centers of galaxies through the merging of smaller black holes and the accretion of gas and dust.

3. What is the event horizon of a black hole?

The event horizon is the point of no return for anything that gets too close to a black hole. Once an object crosses the event horizon, it can no longer escape the gravitational pull of the black hole.

4. Can black holes eventually disappear?

According to current theories, black holes do not disappear. They continue to exist and grow in size by absorbing matter and merging with other black holes.

5. How do we detect and study black holes?

Black holes are invisible, but we can detect their presence through their effects on surrounding matter and light. Astronomers use various tools, such as telescopes and gravitational wave detectors, to study black holes and their behavior.

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