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Doubting the Existence of Black Holes

The Good Reverend writes: "It seems that there's a growing movement that doubts the existence of black holes, going against most of the rest of astrophysics. They suggest the existence of gravastars, "star-size agglomerations of "wavelike" substance" (space-time fabric, if you will). Different scientists claim to have created the "wavelike substance" in a lab, called Bose-Einstein condensates." I understand gravastars taste terrific with cream cheese and red onion.

7 of 299 comments (clear)

  1. Neutron stars by Cally · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Would that be rather like neutron stars? My understanding is that current orthodox astrophysics models meutron stars as either a Bose-Einstein state, or as (in effect) a single, very big, neutron. (Or, er, are those the same things?) C'mon astrophysicists, enquiring idiots want to know! ;)

    --
    "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    1. Re:Neutron stars by EllisDees · · Score: 3, Interesting

      IANAAP, but they are not really the same thing. A neutron star is under so much gravitation that it has had its electrons physically pulled into the nucleus of its atoms, where they combine with the protons to form neutrons, leaving only a giant pile of neutrons. A Bose-Einstein state is when atomic motion slows down enough that the wavelike properties of matter become apparent over the particle-like properties. I suppose that in the center of a black hole, since there is theoretically no possibility of motion, something like a Bose-Einstein state makes sense over just collapsing to a point, even if we still can't 'see' it.

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  2. Perhaps someone could explain... by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...whether a theory, unifying the gravitational force with the other three fundamental forces, would be at odds with the existence of black holes?

    I have often wondered (but never had the time, inclination or intelligence to go find out :)) how a quantum view of gravity would affect theories on black holes and the birth of the universe. Basically my question is: If gravitational attraction is carried by a particle (the graviton) as is conjectured by many scientists, then how can one of these escape from a black hole any more than another particle?

    I guess that either:

    a) It can't, ergo black holes don't exist;
    b) It can, and Einstein was wrong somewhere;
    c) There is some effect similar to the X-ray "emissions" from black holes, whereby the particles appear to come from the black hole but actually never cross its event horizon.

    Which just goes to show that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. :)

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  3. Not a good idea to post before publishing by Neurotensor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I would like to point out that posting an article before the team concerned has published their paper is very bad news for the team.

    What often happens is that the team becomes doubted initially because they haven't published the paper, or because the article writer doesn't know what he/she is writing about. Sometimes it blows up in their face, ala Cold Fusion.

    I would also like to note that the technical quality of the article is poor and shows a lack of understanding of the subject matter.

    For example:
    "The location of a particle constantly varies according to a statistical pattern -- one moment it's here, another moment it's there"

    This shows a complete lack of understanding of the uncertainty principle! The particle has no 'position', and as such it can't be here one moment and there the next. Its position-space wavefunction is the best we can get.

    There are also quite a lot of claims made in the article that really deserve a reference - hence the problem if the only reference is unpublished - in particular I would like to see an argument for why spacetime undergoes a phase transition inside the black hole. What theory predicted this? Certainly not General Relativity, which is what predicted black holes in the first place. What modifications must be made? How is quantum mechanics used in this setting?

    Note that quantum gravity is still an unsolved problem, so I'd be surprised if this prediction turns out to be spot-on. But I can't tell for sure since the paper is unpublished =(

  4. Re:Bose-Einstein Condensates and Black Holes by Dances+with+Sheep · · Score: 3, Interesting

    s far as we know, once you pass this point there is NO OTHER REPULSIVE FORCE available to keep the collapse in check. The star collapses all the way down to a single mathmatical point.


    On the other hand, there are the (relatively) recent measurements of distant galaxies moving faster than expected, suggesting a repulsive force weaker than gravity. If it does exist and is governed by some power law like gravity or electrical forces, then at sufficiently small distances it is stronger than gravity, thus creating an extremely powerful repulsive force.


    Perhaps a sufficiently massive black hole would even achieve critical mass and create a really big bang :-)


    (I'd use equations and references, but that might give me the illusion of credibility)

  5. Brought up several weeks back by praedor · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This story first hit /. several weeks ago. I am glad to see the astrophysics community taking it onward and upward. Me no like blackie-holes. There is that ugly problem of infinities, entropy imbalances, loss of information, and so forth - none of which appear in the gravastar model...with the added bonus that a gravastar in every other way behaves exactly like a "black hole" (gravitationally).


    Cosmology DOES contain ideas of phase changes occurring during the development of the universe after the big bang, so gravastars with space-time phase changes fits in there too.


    It still permits sci-fi some cool material too, so the loss of classic black holes would be no biggie on that front.


    Bring REASON back and eliminate "black holes". Silly, impossible buggers they are.

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    In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
  6. On the other end of theories... Article by jpiterak · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Here is another article from ScienceNews (great layman's magazine for a weekly overview of interesting science research)...

    This discusses the possibility of tiny black holes created by high-energy collisions (discussed in a previous Slashdot), which the researches hypothesize happens regularly in our upper atmosphere (bit of a stretch). It also discusses a novel theory as to why gravity is so significantly weaker than other local forces -- That unlike other forces, gravity acts through all the 'extra' dimensions hypothesized in super-string theory.

    One of the more interesting things about the article is that it shows that with recent developments (the new Large Hadron Collider, etc.) scientists are beginning to reach a point where they can start to prove or disprove parts of super-string theory... Interesting stuff indeed!