Super Novae and emission of electromagnetic waves and gravitation wavefronts

In summary: Hi, after reflecting a bit I don't think that gravitational waves of a supernova are completely swallowed by a black hole near by as long as the supernova is not at or "below" the event horizon.Philosophically said, if that would be so, the supernova would be part of the black hole (as anything behind the horizon becomes part of the hole) and if it is outside the event horizon, some gravitational waves and even photons and materia might escape.No. G-Waves are perturbations of the same field that IS the black hole. A black hole will cause effects to be observed, but it doesn't "suck in" more than what it is. You
  • #1
hammock
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Hello, could you please help to clarifly the following.

Do electromagnetic (e.g. light) and gravitational wavefronts caused by e.g. a supernova both appear at the same time seen from a distant observer perspective?

Thank you!
 
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  • #2
Is gravitation propagating at max. speed of light?

I'd say yes, but it would be great to hear the answer from experts.

IMO, the maximal possible speed in our Universe (being C) is set by the structure of space-time fabric.
 
  • #3
Hi, the gravitational wavefront would expand with the speed of light. The idea behind is, as gravitation folds and expands spacetime, the electromagnetic wave has to follow the path of the folded and expanded spacetime compared to gravitation, where the e.g. minima and maxima of space expand with speed of light.

Would be nice if anyone could clarify this.
 
  • #4
They arrive at the same time. Both propogate at light speed.
 
  • #5
What if Supernova exploded near a Black Hole, all matter and even light (photons) would be sucked into it, what about gravitation (gravitons), would they propagate outwards in space or would a BH suck those in too, and then increase its own gravitation force?

Would be strange if so, I'd say gravitation cannot "suck" gravitation, right?
 
  • #6
I`d day, in the extreme (and please let's talk about extremes, all the others I don't understand).

In the extreme I'd guess the mass of the black hole would have to be infinite to suck the gravitation of the supernova.
 
  • #7
Gravitons are an idea from quantum theory and black holes are from General Relativity. So far there is no generally accepted theory which can handle both.

Classical gravitational waves are part of General Relativity. These relate only to changes in the gravitational field, not to the field itself, and propagate at the speed of light.

It's very difficult to produce significant changes in a gravitational field; for example, if you try shaking something, this has an equal and opposite effect on the mechanism doing the shaking, so overall the center of mass of the system is unaffected and the distant gravitational field is unchanged.

See the Wikipedia article on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_wave" for more information including some nice animated graphics.
 
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  • #8
Hello Jonathan, thank you for your reply. I will reflect on that what you wrote.

Addendum: I will look at the pictures. but I already saw saw some pictures and read some books. However. You can't easily create a picture of a field as it changes its value in every point of space time and therefore every approximation at a point of time is, in fact, incorrect. Therefore the maximum values (in the pictures of Wikipedia) should have been spheric, meeting nearly at the north and south pole of the singularity, expanding with lightspeed c at their minma and maxima.
 
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  • #9
Thank you. That was a good hint.
 
  • #10
Jonathan Scott said:
Gravitons are an idea from quantum theory and black holes are from General Relativity. So far there is no generally accepted theory which can handle both.

Classical gravitational waves are part of General Relativity. These relate only to changes in the gravitational field, not to the field itself, and propagate at the speed of light.
Thanks for clarification re gravitons, gravitational waves and which theory handles which.

So, QT doesn't handle singularities?

Based solely on GR, isn't the space-time near the Black Hole curved so much that gravitational waves of Super Novae exploding nearby wouldn't propagate in all directions outwards in space, but just in one direction towards the BH?
 
  • #11
Hi, after reflecting a bit I don't think that gravitational waves of a supernova are completely swallowed by a black hole near by as long as the supernova is not at or "below" the event horizon.

Philosophically said, if that would be so, the supernova would be part of the black hole (as anything behind the horizon becomes part of the hole) and if it is outside the event horizon, some gravitational waves and even photons and materia might escape.

I do also imagine gravitational waves as a threedimensional field which manipulates spacetime. But I believe with standard mathematics you can just discuss to the point of the event horizon, but not below.
 
  • #12
Boy@n said:
Thanks for clarification re gravitons, gravitational waves and which theory handles which.

So, QT doesn't handle singularities?

Nope, both GR gives you meaningless infinities and QM doesn't include gravity at all! You'd need to accept underdeveloped theories such as string/M-theory or others which account for gravity at the Planck Scale and/or below to get a meaningful answer.

Boy@n said:
Based solely on GR, isn't the space-time near the Black Hole curved so much that gravitational waves of Super Novae exploding nearby wouldn't propagate in all directions outwards in space, but just in one direction towards the BH?

No. G-Waves are perturbations of the same field that IS the black hole. A black hole will cause effects to be observed, but it doesn't "suck in" more than what it is. You're essentially asking of spacetime would cause all spacetime to implode on spacetime... which is a meaningless statement.
 
  • #13
hammock said:
Hi, after reflecting a bit I don't think that gravitational waves of a supernova are completely swallowed by a black hole near by as long as the supernova is not at or "below" the event horizon.

Philosophically said, if that would be so, the supernova would be part of the black hole (as anything behind the horizon becomes part of the hole) and if it is outside the event horizon, some gravitational waves and even photons and materia might escape.

I do also imagine gravitational waves as a threedimensional field which manipulates spacetime. But I believe with standard mathematics you can just discuss to the point of the event horizon, but not below.

Gravity is a 4 dimensional phenomenon... spaceTIME, so 3+1. Gravitational waves are perturbations in 4 dimensions.
 
  • #14
Sorry, you're right. I always make the mistake and see myself from observer perspective not as part of spacetime but outside from it.
 
  • #15
hammock said:
Sorry, you're right. I always make the mistake and see myself from observer perspective not as part of spacetime but outside from it.

It's a common enough error, don't sweat it.
 
  • #16
hammock said:
Do electromagnetic (e.g. light) and gravitational wavefronts caused by e.g. a supernova both appear at the same time seen from a distant observer perspective?

We haven't yet detected gravitational waves, but we expect to see gravitational radiation from a supernova a few hours before we see any light from the explosion. Gravitational radiation is produced by the mixing processes and collapse of the SN, and gets out immediately. It takes a few hours for the shock wave to work through 20 solar masses of stuff so you don't see any visible sign of the explosion until several hours after you see a gravitational signal.

This has been experimentally tested in another context. In SN 1987A, we recorded a very strong neutrino signal several hours before anyone visually saw the supernova. So the gravity signal should arrive at the same time as the neutrino signal. (Now whether or not it *does* is something that people are interested in seeing,)

One thing that would be really interesting is that we've developed our neutrino telescopes and LIGO enough so that we should be able to detect a supernova in the Milky Way, even if it is in a part of the galaxy that we can't see.
 
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Also one big unresolved question is do supernova produces black holes (i.e. can you have a supernova and then have collapse into a black hole or do black holes just form quietly).
 
  • #18
Good point, twofish, gravitation radiation can arrive sooner than photons - as do neutrinos, mea culpa. I have reservations about black holes forming directly from stellar collape events. See, for example http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/massive-mega-star-challenges-black-hole-theory-100818.html
This observation suggests neutron star mass does not scale well with progenitor star mass - which also appears consistent with the fact hardly any neutron stars are known to exceed the Chandrasekahr mass limit. I suspect stellar mass black holes most commonly originate via collisions between degenerate matter stars in binary systems.
 
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  • #19
Gentlemen, I have now reflected and tried to repress the obvious question: Does this mean that information can be distributet at light speed rather than the speed of light?
 
  • #20
hammock said:
Gentlemen, I have now reflected and tried to repress the obvious question: Does this mean that information can be distributet at light speed rather than the speed of light?

You just asked if information can be disseminated at c, or at c. The answer is... yes, but you only gave one option. Fortunately it's the correct option, but you're starting to worry me.
 
  • #21
hammock said:
Gentlemen, I have now reflected and tried to repress the obvious question: Does this mean that information can be distribute at light speed rather than the speed of light?

*If* special relativity is correct and *if* you think that the universe will not allow you to send messages back in time (so that you can kill your grandfather), then you cannot send signals faster than c.

Note that it's possible (and quite common) to have light travel slower than the speed of light.
 
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Thank you!
 
  • #23
A recent descussion on light speed brought me back to this discussion. Perhaps I initially asked my question in an uncorrect way, so please let me ask more directly.

If something (a point in the universe) begins to send light and gravitational waves, beginning at the same time - how would then a distant receiver measure arrival of both gravitational waves and light. At the same time? With a lag?

I assume that gravitational waves, if "powerful" enough, bend and compress space and time, which then leads to "distortion" of the light beam, as it follows spacetime, and gravitational waves "make" space time.

So I would suspect that gravitational waves would be earlier at the point of the receiver compared to light.

Is that complete nonsense?
 

Related to Super Novae and emission of electromagnetic waves and gravitation wavefronts

1. What is a supernova?

A supernova is a powerful explosive event that occurs when a star reaches the end of its life cycle. It is the largest and most energetic explosion in the universe, releasing an immense amount of energy and creating new elements.

2. How are electromagnetic waves emitted during a supernova?

During a supernova, the outer layers of the star are violently ejected into space. This process creates a shockwave that propagates through the surrounding material, causing it to heat up and emit electromagnetic radiation.

3. What is the significance of gravitation wavefronts in supernovae?

Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of space-time that are caused by the acceleration of massive objects, such as during a supernova explosion. These waves can provide valuable information about the properties of the supernova and the nature of gravity.

4. How do scientists detect and study supernovae?

Scientists use a variety of tools and techniques to detect and study supernovae, including telescopes that can observe different wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, such as X-rays and radio waves. They also use instruments that can detect gravitational waves and analyze the chemical composition of the supernova remnants.

5. Can supernovae have any impact on Earth?

Supernovae are incredibly powerful events, but they are typically too far away from Earth to have a direct impact. However, they can have indirect effects, such as enriching the interstellar medium with new elements and potentially triggering the formation of new stars.

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