Something Strange Happens When You Follow Einstein's Math
Summary
TLDRThe video script explores the fascinating science behind black holes, white holes, and wormholes, as predicted by Einstein's general theory of relativity. It explains how black holes, formed from the collapse of massive stars, create a gravitational pull so strong that not even light can escape. The script delves into the concept of the event horizon, where time appears to slow down and objects seem to freeze. It also touches upon white holes, which are the theoretical opposite of black holes, ejecting matter and light. The concept of wormholes, as shortcuts through spacetime, is introduced, suggesting the possibility of travel between parallel universes. However, the script highlights the theoretical nature of these phenomena, the mathematical complexities involved, and the current consensus that traversable wormholes and parallel universes are unlikely to exist based on our understanding of physics.
Takeaways
- 🌌 **Black Holes and Visibility**: You can't see anything enter a black hole due to the extreme gravitational pull that slows down and eventually freezes light from escaping.
- 🚀 **Time Dilation**: As an object approaches a black hole, it appears to slow down and time appears to dilate from the perspective of an outside observer.
- 🔴 **Redshift**: Light from an object near a black hole gets redshifted to the point of invisibility as it loses energy trying to escape the black hole's gravity.
- ⚫ **General Theory of Relativity**: Einstein's theory describes gravity not as a force between masses but as a curvature of spacetime caused by mass.
- 📘 **Einstein's Field Equations**: These complex equations describe how the distribution of matter and energy in the universe curves spacetime.
- ⭕ **Schwarzschild Metric**: The first non-trivial solution to Einstein's equations, describing the spacetime curvature outside a spherically symmetric, non-rotating mass.
- ⚠️ **Singularity**: A point in space where the curvature of spacetime becomes infinite, such as at the center of a black hole.
- 🌟 **Stellar Collapse**: When a massive star runs out of fuel, it can collapse under its own gravity, potentially forming a black hole if it exceeds the Chandrasekhar limit.
- 🌀 **Rotating Black Holes**: Unlike non-rotating black holes, rotating ones have a more complex structure with an ergosphere and inner horizon, allowing for theoretical traversal of the singularity.
- 🌐 **Multiverse Theory**: Some solutions to Einstein's equations suggest the existence of white holes and parallel universes, although these are speculative and not proven.
- ⛓ **Wormholes**: Hypothetical tunnels in spacetime that could, in theory, provide shortcuts between different points in space or even connect to other universes, but their existence is unconfirmed.
Q & A
Why can't we see anything enter a black hole?
-As an object approaches the event horizon of a black hole, the gravitational pull causes time to slow down as observed from a distance. This effect, known as gravitational time dilation, makes the object appear to slow down and eventually freeze at the event horizon. Additionally, the light emitted by the object gets redshifted to the point where it becomes too dim to be seen.
What is the Einstein field equation?
-The Einstein field equation is a set of ten interrelated differential equations that describe the fundamental interaction of gravitation as a result of the distribution of mass and energy within spacetime. It is represented as a single line equation involving the metric tensor, the Ricci tensor, and the energy-momentum tensor, but it is actually a system of coupled, non-linear partial differential equations.
How does the Schwarzschild solution describe the spacetime around a black hole?
-The Schwarzschild solution provides the first non-trivial solution to Einstein's field equations, describing how spacetime curves outside of a spherically symmetric, non-rotating mass. It indicates that spacetime is nearly flat far from the mass, but becomes increasingly curved as one approaches it, which slows down time and attracts objects.
What is a singularity and why is it a problem in the context of the Schwarzschild solution?
-A singularity is a point in spacetime where certain physical quantities, such as density or curvature, become infinite. In the context of the Schwarzschild solution, there are two problematic singularities: one at the center of the mass (r=0) and another at the event horizon (r=2M). These singularities indicate a breakdown of the solution and our understanding of physics at these points.
How did Chandrasekhar's work contribute to our understanding of stellar collapse?
-Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar showed that electron degeneracy pressure, which supports white dwarfs against gravitational collapse, has a limit—the Chandrasekhar limit. Stars with a mass greater than this limit cannot be supported by electron degeneracy pressure and will continue to collapse, potentially leading to the formation of a neutron star or a black hole.
What is the Penrose diagram and how does it help visualize the universe?
-The Penrose diagram is a graphical representation of spacetime that shows the entire history of the universe in a single map. It is a highly simplified 'fish-eye' view that contracts the infinite past, infinite distance, and infinite future into a comprehensible diagram. It helps visualize the structure of spacetime, including the behavior near black holes and the concept of a white hole.
What is an Einstein-Rosen Bridge and how is it related to wormholes?
-An Einstein-Rosen Bridge, also known as a wormhole, is a hypothetical structure in spacetime that would allow for direct passage between two distant points in the universe or even between two separate universes. It is a solution to the equations of general relativity, but its existence and stability are subjects of ongoing debate and research.
How does the Kerr solution differ from the Schwarzschild solution?
-The Kerr solution is a solution to Einstein's field equations that describes a rotating black hole, unlike the Schwarzschild solution which describes a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr solution accounts for the effects of rotation, leading to a more complex structure with an ergosphere and an inner event horizon, and a ring-shaped singularity instead of a point singularity.
What is the role of exotic matter in the theory of wormholes?
-Exotic matter, which has a negative energy density, is theorized to be necessary to keep wormholes open and stable. It would counteract the natural tendency of wormholes to collapse under their own gravity. However, the existence of such exotic matter is speculative and not supported by current experimental evidence.
Why do scientists believe that traversable wormholes and parallel universes might not exist?
-While solutions to Einstein's field equations suggest the possibility of traversable wormholes and parallel universes, the physical realization of these phenomena is doubted due to the requirement of exotic matter with negative energy density, which is not observed in nature. Additionally, the stability and consistency of such structures with the known laws of physics are subjects of debate.
What is the significance of the event horizon in the context of a black hole?
-The event horizon is the boundary around a black hole beyond which nothing, not even light, can escape the gravitational pull of the black hole. It is the point of no return for any matter or radiation approaching the black hole. From an outside observer's perspective, objects appear to freeze at the event horizon due to extreme gravitational time dilation.
How does the concept of a white hole relate to that of a black hole?
-A white hole is a theoretical concept that is essentially the reverse of a black hole. While a black hole is characterized by the property of not allowing anything to escape its gravitational pull, a white hole is thought to expel matter and energy. It is derived from a time-reversed solution of the black hole equations, suggesting that if matter falls into a black hole in one direction of time, it could be ejected in the opposite direction of time.
Outlines
🌌 The Enigma of Black Holes
This paragraph introduces the concept of black holes, explaining that nothing, including light, can escape once it crosses the event horizon. It discusses the perspective of an observer watching an object fall into a black hole, noting how time appears to slow and eventually stop at the event horizon. The paragraph also touches on the implications of the general theory of relativity, which predicts not just black holes but also white holes and the possibility of parallel universes. It highlights the historical context, leading up to Einstein's formulation of the theory of general relativity, which describes gravity as the curvature of spacetime caused by mass.
📐 Spacetime and the Schwarzschild Solution
The second paragraph delves into the mathematics of general relativity, specifically Einstein's field equations, which describe how the distribution of matter and energy curves spacetime. It explains the complexity of these equations and the need for advanced mathematical tools to solve them. The narrative then shifts to the historical context of Karl Schwarzschild, who found the first non-trivial solution to Einstein's equations, known as the Schwarzschild metric. This solution describes the curvature of spacetime outside a spherically symmetric, non-rotating mass. The paragraph also discusses the concept of the spacetime interval and how it is affected by the presence of mass, leading to the discovery of singularities at the center of the mass and at the Schwarzschild radius, which is the critical point where escape velocity equals the speed of light.
💥 Stellar Collapse and the Birth of Black Holes
The third paragraph explores the end of a star's life cycle and the conditions under which a black hole might form. It describes the balance of forces within a star and the role of electron degeneracy pressure in preventing a star from collapsing into a black hole. The narrative follows the contributions of Ralph Fowler, Pauli's exclusion principle, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, and the concept of electron degeneracy pressure. The paragraph also highlights the work of Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, who identified a limit to the mass a star can have before it collapses beyond a white dwarf, known as the Chandrasekhar limit. The discussion then moves to the discovery of neutron stars and the role of neutron degeneracy pressure in supporting stars heavier than the Chandrasekhar limit.
🖥️ Coordinate Systems and the Illusion of Singularities
This paragraph discusses the concept of coordinate systems in the context of black holes and how they can influence our understanding of singularities. It explains that the appearance of a singularity at the event horizon is an artifact of the chosen coordinate system and not a physical reality. The text introduces the idea of space flowing into a black hole, akin to a waterfall, and how photons struggle to escape this flow. It also touches on the concept of a white hole, which is the time-reversed counterpart of a black hole, where matter is ejected instead of absorbed. The paragraph concludes with a humorous analogy to spam calls and a brief mention of a sponsor, Incogni, which helps combat spam calls.
🌟 Penrose Diagrams and Cosmic Topology
The fifth paragraph introduces Penrose diagrams as a way to visualize the entire universe's spacetime, including black holes, white holes, and parallel universes. It describes how the Penrose diagram represents the infinite past, present, and future as well as infinite distance, and how it can illustrate the concept of a white hole and its relationship to a black hole. The discussion continues with the idea that black holes may lead to the existence of white holes and parallel universes, and how these concepts can be mathematically represented. The paragraph also explores the notion of an Einstein-Rosen Bridge, a theoretical passage through a black hole to another universe, and the limitations of this idea in the context of real-world physics.
🌀 Rotating Black Holes and the Kerr Solution
The sixth paragraph shifts the focus to rotating black holes and the Kerr solution, which is a more complex solution to Einstein's equations that describes a spinning black hole. It explains how the rotation of a black hole changes its structure, leading to an ergosphere where spacetime is dragged along with the black hole's rotation. The narrative describes the layers of a rotating black hole, including the outer and inner horizons, and the possibility of traversing the singularity in a different manner than with a non-rotating black hole. The paragraph also discusses the theoretical implications of a rotating black hole, including the potential for white holes and the existence of multiple universes, while acknowledging the speculative nature of these ideas.
🚀 Wormholes, Exotic Matter, and the Future of Relativity
The final paragraph addresses the possibility of traversable wormholes and the challenges associated with their existence. It discusses the work of Michael Morris and Kip Thorne, who explored wormholes that could be used for interstellar travel and the requirements for such structures to remain open. The text highlights the necessity for exotic matter with negative energy density to stabilize wormholes, which is considered unlikely to exist according to current physics. The paragraph concludes by reflecting on the history of scientific discovery and the potential for future surprises, suggesting that while current understanding indicates that white holes and traversable wormholes may not exist, there is always the possibility of new discoveries that could challenge this view.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Black Hole
💡Event Horizon
💡General Theory of Relativity
💡White Hole
💡Wormhole
💡Singularity
💡Spacetime
💡Einstein's Field Equations
💡Schwarzschild Radius
💡Redshift
💡Rotating Black Hole
💡Exotic Matter
Highlights
Objects entering a black hole appear to slow down and freeze at the event horizon from an outside observer's perspective.
Light from an object near a black hole gets redshifted to the point of invisibility due to the intense gravitational pull.
Einstein's General Theory of Relativity predicts not only black holes but also white holes and the possibility of parallel universes.
Newton's gravity theory had a fundamental flaw, which Einstein resolved by describing gravity as the curvature of spacetime caused by mass.
Einstein's field equations describe how the distribution of matter and energy curves spacetime.
The Schwarzschild metric is the first non-trivial solution to Einstein's equations, describing the spacetime curvature outside a spherically symmetric mass.
The concept of a singularity arises from the breakdown of equations at points of infinite density, such as at the center of a black hole.
The idea that a star's collapse could be halted by electron degeneracy pressure was challenged by Chandrasekhar's limit, which defines a maximum mass for white dwarfs.
The existence of black holes was doubted until Oppenheimer and Snyder's work showed that stars could collapse indefinitely, forming black holes.
The spacetime diagram of a black hole shows how light cones change as they approach the event horizon, illustrating the black hole's one-way membrane effect.
The Kruskal-Szekers diagram and Penrose diagram provide visualizations of black holes, including the concept of a white hole and a final moment in time for anything entering a black hole.
The theoretical existence of white holes, which expel matter, is a time-reversed concept compared to black holes.
The Schwarzschild and Kerr solutions suggest the existence of wormholes that could connect different parts of the universe or even different universes.
The stability and existence of wormholes may require exotic matter with negative energy density, which is currently speculative and not proven to exist.
Rotating black holes, as described by the Kerr solution, have a complex structure with multiple layers, including an ergosphere where space is dragged along with the black hole's rotation.
The singularity in a rotating black hole is not a point but a ring, and there are theories that one might be able to fly through it.
The Penrose diagram for a spinning black hole suggests that there are regions inside the inner horizon where one could move freely and potentially avoid the singularity.
While the theoretical models suggest the possibility of multiple universes and exotic phenomena, practical observations and physical laws may limit the actual existence of such entities.
Transcripts
- You can never see anything enter a black hole.
(bell dings)
Imagine you trap your nemesis in a rocket ship
and blast him off towards a black hole.
He looks back at you shaking his fist at a constant rate.
As he zooms in, gravity gets stronger,
so you would expect him to speed up,
but that is not what you see.
Instead, the rocket ship appears to be slowing down.
Not only that, he also appears
to be shaking his fist slower and slower.
That's because from your perspective,
his time is slowing down
at the very instant when he should cross the event horizon,
the point beyond which not even light can escape,
he and his rocket ship do not disappear,
instead, they seem to stop frozen in time.
The light from the spaceship gets dimmer and redder
until it completely fades from view.
This is how any object would look
crossing the event horizon.
Light is still coming from the point where he crossed,
it's just too redshifted to see,
but if you could see that light,
then in theory you would see everything
that has ever fallen into the black hole
frozen on its horizon, including the star that formed it,
but in practice, photons are emitted at discreet intervals,
so there will be a last photon emitted outside the horizon,
and therefore these images will fade after some time.
- This is just one of the strange results
that comes outta the general theory of relativity,
our current best theory of gravity.
The first solution of Einstein's equations
predicted not only black holes,
but also their opposite, white holes.
It also implied the existence of parallel universes
and even possibly a way to travel between them.
This is a video about the real science of black holes,
white holes, and wormholes.
- The general theory of relativity
arose at least in part due to a fundamental flaw
in Newtonian gravity.
In the 1600s Isaac Newton
contemplated how an apple falls to the ground,
how the moon orbits the earth and earth orbits the sun
and he concluded that every object with mass
must attract every other,
but Newton was troubled by his own theory.
How could masses separated by such vast distances
apply a force on each other?
He wrote, "That one body may act upon another at a distance
through a vacuum without the mediation of anything else
is to me, so great and absurdity that I believe no man
who has a competent faculty of thinking
could ever fall into it."
One man who definitely had a competent faculty of thinking,
was Albert Einstein and over 200 years later,
he figured out how gravity is mediated.
Bodies do not exert forces on each other directly.
Instead, a mass like the sun curves the spacetime
in its immediate vicinity.
This, then curves the spacetime around it
and so on all the way to the earth.
So the earth orbits the sun, because the spacetime
earth is passing through is curved.
Masses are affected by the local curvature
of spacetime, so no action at a distance is required.
Mathematically, this is described
by Einstein's field equations.
Can you write down the Einstein field equation?
- This was the the result of Einstein's decade of hard work
after special relativity
and essentially what we've got in the field equations
on one side it says,
tell me about the distribution of matter and energy.
The other side tells you what the resultant curvature
of spacetime is from that distribution
of matter and energy and it's a single line.
It looks like, oh, this is a simple equation, right?
But it's not really one equation.
It's a family of equations and to make life more difficult,
they're coupled equations, so they depend upon each other
and they are differential equations,
so it means that there are integrals
that have to be done, da, da da.
So there's a whole bunch of steps that you need to do
to solve the field equations.
To see what a solution to these equations would look like,
we need a tool to understand spacetime.
So imagine your floating around in empty space.
A flash of light goes off above your head
and spreads out in all directions.
Now your entire future, anything that can
and will ever happen to you will occur within this bubble
because the only way to get out of it
would be to travel faster than light.
In two dimensions, this bubble is just a growing circle.
If we allow time to run up the screen
and take snapshots at regular intervals,
then this light bubble traces out a cone,
your future light cone.
By convention, the axes are scaled so that light rays
always travel at 45 degrees.
This cone reveals the only region of spacetime
that you can ever hope to explore and influence.
Now imagine that instead of a flash of light
above your head, those photons were actually traveling in
from all corners of the universe
and they met at that instant
and then continued traveling on
in their separate directions.
Well, in that case then into the past,
these photons also reveal a light cone,
your past light cone.
Only events that happened inside this cone
could have affected you up to the present moment.
We can simplify this diagram even further
by plotting just one spatial and one time dimension.
This is the spacetime diagram of empty space.
If you want to measure how far apart
two events are in spacetime, you use something called
the spacetime interval.
The interval squared is equal to minus dt squared,
plus dx squared, since spacetime is flat,
the geometry is the same everywhere
and so this formula holds throughout the entire diagram,
which makes it really easy to measure the separation
between any two events, but around a mass,
spacetime is curved and therefore you need to modify
the equation to take into account the geometry.
This is what solutions to Einstein's equations are like.
They tell you how spacetime curves
and how to measure the separation between two events
in that curved geometry.
Einstein published his equations in 1915
during the First World War,
but he couldn't find an exact solution.
Luckily, a copy of his paper made its way
to the eastern front where Germany was fighting Russia,
stationed there was one of the best astrophysicists
of the time, Karl Schwarzschild.
Despite being 41 years old, he had volunteered
to calculate artillery trajectories for the German army.
At least until a greater challenge caught his attention,
how to solve Einstein's field equations.
Schwarzschild did the standard physicist thing
and imagined the simplest possible scenario,
an eternal static universe with nothing in it
except a single spherically symmetric point mass.
This mass was electrically neutral and not rotating.
Since this was the only feature of his universe,
he measured everything using spherical coordinates
relative to this center of this mass.
So r is the radius and theta and phi give the angles.
For his time coordinate, he chose time as being measured
by someone far away from the mass,
where spacetime is essentially flat.
Using this approach, Schwarzschild found the first
non-trivial solution to Einstein's equations,
which nowadays we write like this.
This Schwarzschild metric describes how spacetime curves
outside of the mass.
It's pretty simple and makes intuitive sense,
far away from the mass spacetime is nearly flat,
but as you get closer and closer to it,
spacetime becomes more and more curved,
it attracts objects in and time runs slower.
(gunshots firing)
Schwarzschild sent his solution to Einstein,
concluding with, "The war treated me kindly enough
in spite of the heavy gunfire
to allow me to get away from it all
and take this walk in the land of your ideas."
Einstein replied, "I have read your paper
with the utmost interest, I had not expected
that one could formulate the exact solution to the problem
in such a simple way."
But what seemed at first quite simple,
soon became more complicated.
Shortly after Schwarzschild solution was published,
people noticed two problem spots.
At the center of the mass, at r equals zero,
this term is divided by zero, so it blows up to infinity
and therefore this equation breaks down
and it can no longer describe what's physically happening.
This is what's called a singularity.
Maybe that point could be excused,
because it's in the middle of the mass,
but there's another problem spot outside of it
at a special distance from the center
known as the Schwarzschild radius, this term blows up.
So there is a second singularity. What is going on here?
Well, at the Schwarzschild radius,
the spacetime curvature becomes so steep
that the escape velocity, the speed that anything would need
to leave there is the speed of light
and that would mean that inside the Schwarzschild radius,
nothing, not even light would be able to escape.
So you'd have this dark object
that swallows up matter and light,
a black hole, if you will,
but most scientists doubted that such an object could exist,
because it would require a lot of mass
to collapse down into a tiny space.
How could that possibly ever happen?
(thrilling music)
Astronomers at the time were studying
what happens at the end of a star's life.
During its lifetime the inward force of gravity is balanced
by the outward radiation pressure
created by the energy released through nuclear fusion,
but when the fuel runs out, the radiation pressure drops.
So gravity pulls all the star material inwards, but how far?
Most astronomers believed some physical process
would hold it up and in 1926,
Ralph Fowler came up with a possible mechanism.
Pauli's exclusion principles states that,
"Fermions like electrons cannot occupy the same state,
so as matter gets pushed closer and closer together,
the electrons each occupy their own tiny volumes,"
but Heisenberg's uncertainty principle says that,
"You can't know the position and momentum of a particle
with absolute certainty, so as the particles become
more and more constrained in space,
the uncertainty in their momentum,
and hence their velocity must go up."
So the more a star is compressed,
the faster electrons will wiggle around
and that creates an outward pressure.
This electron degeneracy pressure would prevent the star
from collapsing completely.
Instead, it would form a white dwarf
with the density much higher than a normal star
and remarkably enough astronomers had observed stars
that fit this description.
One of them was Sirius B.
But the relief from this discovery was short-lived.
Four years later, 19-year-old Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
traveled by boat to England to study with Fowler
and Arthur Eddington, one of the most revered scientists
of the time.
During his voyage, Chandrasekhar realized
that electron degeneracy pressure has its limits.
Electrons can wiggle faster and faster,
but only up to the speed of light.
That means this effect can only support stars
up to a certain mass, the Chandrasekhar limit.
Beyond this, Chandrasekhar believed,
not even electron de degeneracy pressure
could prevent a star from collapsing,
but Eddington was not impressed.
He publicly blasted Chandrasekhar saying,
"There should be a law of nature
to prevent a star from behaving in this absurd way"
and indeed scientists did discover a way
that stars heavier than the Chandrasekhar limit
could support themselves.
When a star collapses beyond a white dwarf,
electrons and protons fuse together
to form neutrinos and neutrons.
These neutrons are also fermions,
but with nearly 2000 times the mass an electron,
their degeneracy pressure is even stronger.
So this is what holds up neutron stars.
There was this conviction among scientists
that even if we didn't know the mechanism,
something would prevent a star from collapsing
into a single point and forming a black hole,
because black holes were just too preposterous to be real.
The big blow to this belief came in the late 1930s
when Jay Robert Oppenheimer and George Volkoff
found that neutron stars also have a maximum mass.
Shortly after Oppenheimer and Hartland Snyder
showed that for the heaviest stars,
there is nothing left to save them when their fuel runs out,
they wrote, "This contraction will continue indefinitely,"
but Einstein still couldn't believe it.
Oppenheimer was saying that stars can collapse indefinitely,
but when Einstein looked at the math,
he found that time freezes on the horizon.
So it seemed like nothing could ever enter,
which suggested that either
there's something we don't understand
or that black holes can't exist,
(star explodes)
but Oppenheimer offered a solution to the problem.
He said to an outside observer,
you could never see anything go in,
but if you were traveling across the event horizon,
you wouldn't notice anything unusual
and you'd go right past it without even knowing it.
So how is this possible?
We need a spacetime diagram of a black hole.
On the left is the singularity at r equals zero.
The dotted line at r equals 2M is the event horizon.
Since the black hole doesn't move,
these lines go straight up in time.
Now let's see how ingoing and outgoing light ray travel
in this curved geometry.
When you're really far away,
the future light cones are at the usual 45 degrees,
but as you get closer to the horizon,
the light cones get narrower and narrower,
until right at the event horizon,
they're so narrow that they point straight up
and inside the horizon, the light cones tip to the left,
but something strange happens with ingoing light rays.
- They fall in, but they don't get to r equals 2M,
they actually asymptote to that value
as time goes to infinity,
but they don't end at infinity, right?
Mathematically they are connected and come back in
and they're traveling in this direction
and this bothered a lot of people,
this bothered people like Einstein,
because he looked at these equations and went,
"well, if nothing can cross this sort of boundary,
then how could there be black holes?
How could black holes even form?"
- So what is going on here?
Well, what's important to recognize
is that this diagram is a projection.
It's basically a 2D map
of four dimensional curved spacetime.
It's just like projecting the 3D Earth onto a 2D map.
When you do that, you always get distortions.
There is no perfectly accurate way
to map the earth onto a 2D surface,
but different maps can be useful for different purposes.
For example, if you wanna keep angles and shapes the same,
like if you're sailing across the ocean
and you need to find your bearings,
you can use the Mercator projection,
that's the one Google Maps uses.
A downside is that it misrepresent sizes.
Africa and Greenland look about the same size,
but Africa is actually around 14 times larger.
The Gall-Peters projection keeps relative sizes accurate,
but as a result, angles and shapes are distorted.
In a similar way, we can make different projections
of 4D spacetime to study different properties of it.
Physical reality doesn't change,
but the way the map describes it does.
- He had chosen to put a particular coordinate system
of a space and have a time coordinate, and off you go.
It's the most sensible thing to do, right?
- [Derek] People realize that if you choose
a different coordinate system
by doing a coordinate substitution, then the singularity
at the event horizon disappears.
- It goes away.
That problem goes away and things can actually cross
into the black hole.
- What this tells us is that there is
no real physical singularity at the event horizon.
It just resulted from a poor choice of coordinate system.
Another way to visualize what's going on
is by describing space as flowing in towards the black hole,
like a waterfall.
As you get closer, space starts flowing in
faster and faster.
Photons emitted by the spaceship have to swim
against this flow, and this becomes harder and harder
the closer you get.
Photons emitted just outside the horizon
can barely make it out, but it takes longer and longer.
At the horizon, space falls in
as fast as the photons are swimming.
So if the horizon had a finite width,
then photons would get stuck here,
photons from everything that ever fell in,
but the horizon is infinitely thin.
So in reality, photons either eventually escape or fall in.
Inside the horizon, space falls faster
than the speed of light,
and so everything falls into the singularity.
So Oppenheimer was right.
Someone outside a black hole can never see anything enter
because the last photons they can see
will always be from just outside the horizon,
but if you yourself go,
you will fall right across the event horizon
and into the singularity.
Now you can extend the waterfall model
to cover all three spatial dimensions,
and that gives you this, a real simulation
of space flowing into a static black hole
made by my friend Alessandro from ScienceClic.
Later we'll use this model to see what it's like
falling into a rotating black hole.
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You can click that link down in the description
or scan the QR code right here
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I wanna thank Incogni for sponsoring this part of the video
and now back to spacetime maps.
If you take this map and transform it
so that incoming and outgoing light ray
all travel at 45 degrees like we're used to,
then something fascinating happens.
The black hole singularity on the left
transforms into a curved line at the top
and since the future always points up in this map,
it tells us that the singularity is not actually
a place in space, instead, it's a moment in time,
the very last moment in time for anything
that enters a black hole.
The map we've just created is a Kruskal-Szekers diagram,
but this only represents a portion of the universe,
the part inside the black holes event horizon
and the part of the universe closest to it,
but what we can do is contract the whole universe,
the infinite past, infinite distance, and infinite future,
and morph it into a single map.
It's like using the universe's best fish eye lens.
That gives us this penrose diagram.
Again, light rays still always go at 45 degrees.
So the future always points up.
The infinite past is in the bottom of the diagram.
The infinite future at the top
and the sides on the right are infinitely far away.
The black hole singularity is now a straight line
at the top, a final moment in time.
These lines are all at the same distance
from the black hole.
So the singularity is at r equals zero,
the horizon is at r equals 2M,
this line is at r equals 4M,
and this is infinitely far away.
All of these lines are at the same time.
What's great about this map is that it's very easy to see
where you can still go and what could have affected you.
For example, when you're here, you've got a lot of freedom.
You can enter the black hole or fly off to infinity,
and you can see and receive information from this area,
but if you go beyond the horizon,
your only possible future is to meet the singularity.
You can still, however, see and receive information
from the universe.
You just can't send any back out.
Now think about being at this point in the map.
This is at the event horizon,
and now your entire future is within the black hole,
but what is the past of this moment?
Well, you can draw the past light cone
and it reveals this new region.
If you're inside this region,
you can send signals to the universe,
but no matter where you are in the universe,
nothing can ever enter this region
because it will never be inside your light comb.
So things can come out, but never go in.
This is the opposite of a black hole, a white hole.
What color is a white hole?
(Geraint exhales)
(Derek laughs)
- I mean, it's gonna be the,
it's not gonna have a color, right?
It's gonna be whatever's being spat out of it.
It depends what's in there and gets thrown out,
that's what you are going to see.
So if it's got light in there, it's got mass in there,
it's all gonna be ejected.
So the white hole kind of picture
is the time reverse picture of a black hole,
instead of things falling in, things get expelled outwards
and so whilst a black hole has a membrane,
the Schwarzschild horizon, which once you cross,
you can't get back out, the white hole has the opposite.
If you're inside the event horizon, you have to be ejected,
so it kicks you out kind of thing, right?
Relativity doesn't tell you which way time flows.
There's nothing in there that says that, that is the future
and that is the past.
When you are doing your mathematics
and you're working out the behavior of objects,
you make a choice about which direction is the future,
but mathematically, you could have chosen
the other way, right?
You could have had time point in the opposite direction.
Any solution that you find in relativity,
mathematically, you can just flip it
and get a time reverse solution
and that's also a solution to the equations.
- [Derek] Now, we've been showing things
being ejected to the right, but they could just as well
be ejected to the left.
So what's over there?
This line is not at infinity,
so there should be something beyond it.
If we eject things in this direction,
you find that they enter a whole new universe,
one parallel to our own.
- [Geraint] We can fall into this black hole,
and somebody in this universe here
could fall into this black hole in their universe,
and we would find ourselves in the same black hole.
(Derek chuckles)
- The only downside is that
we'd both soon end up in the singularity.
I guess I'm just trying to understand
where that universe appears
in the mathematical part of the solution.
Like, can you point to the part of the equation and be like,
so that's our universe, and then these terms here,
that's the other universe, or do you know what I mean?
Like- - Yeah,
well, it's coordinates, right?
Imagine somebody, right, came up with a coordinate system
for the earth, but only the northern hemisphere
and you looked at that coordinate system, right?
And you looked at it and you said,
"Ah, I can see the coordinate system, it looks fine,
but mathematically latitudes can be negative, right?
You've only got positive latitudes in your solution.
What about the negative ones?"
And they said to you, (scoffs) "Negative ones?
No southern hemisphere, right?"
And you've gotta go, "Well, the mathematics says that
you can have negative latitudes.
Maybe we should go and look over the equator
to see if there is something down there"
and I know that's a kind of extreme example,
because we know we live on a globe,
but we don't know the full geometry
of what's going on here in the sense that
Schwarzschild laid down coordinates
over part of the solution.
It was like him only laying down coordinates
on the northern hemisphere
and other people have come along and said,
"Hey, there's a southern hemisphere"
and more than that, there's two earths.
That's why it's called maximal extension.
It's like, if I have this mathematical structure,
then what is the extent of the coordinates
that I can consider?
And with the Schwarzschild black hole,
you get a second universe
that has its own independent set of coordinates
from our universe.
I want to emphasize right, this is the simplest solution
to the Einstein field equations,
and it already contains a black hole,
white hole and two universes.
- [Derek] That's what you get
when you push this map to its limits
so that every edge ends at a singularity or infinity.
- And in fact, there's another little feature in here,
which is that, that little point there where they cross,
that is an Einstein Rosen Bridge.
- To see it, we need to change coordinates.
Now this line is at constant crustal time
and it connects the space of both universes.
You can see what the spacetime is like
by following this line from right to left.
Far away from the event horizon,
spacetime is basically flat,
but as you get closer to the event horizon,
spacetime starts to curve more and more.
At this cross, you are at the event horizon,
and if you go beyond it, you end up in the parallel universe
that gives you a wormhole that looks like this.
- So that is hypothetically how we could use a black hole
to travel from one universe to another.
- Hypothetically, because these wormholes
aren't actually stable in time.
- It's a bit like a bridge, but it's a bridge that is long
and then becomes shorter and then becomes long again
and if you try to traverse this bridge,
at some point, the bridge is only very short, right?
And you say, "Oh, well, let me just cross this bridge."
But as you start crossing the bridge and start running,
your speed is finite, right?
The speed of light roughly and then the bridge starts,
becoming stretching and you never come out the other side.
- [Derek] This pinching off always happens too fast
for anything to travel through.
You can also see this if you look at the Penrose diagram,
because when you're inside one universe,
there isn't a light cone that can take you
to the other universe.
The only way to do that
would be to travel faster than light,
but there might be another way.
Schwarzschild solution describes a black hole
that doesn't rotate.
Yet, every star does rotate
and since angular momentum must be conserved,
every black hole must also be rotating.
While Schwarzschild found his solution within weeks
after Einstein published his equations,
solving them for a spinning mass
turned out to be much harder.
Physicists tried, but 10 years after Schwarzschild solution,
they still hadn't solved it.
10 years turned into 20, which turned into 40
and then in 1963, Roy Kerr found the solution
to Einstein's equations for a spinning black hole,
which is far more complicated than Schwarzschild solution
and this comes with a few dramatic changes.
The first is that the structure is completely different.
The black hole now consists of several layers.
It's also not spherically symmetric anymore.
This happens because the rotation
causes it to bulge around the equator.
So it's only symmetric about its axis of spin.
Alessandro from science click simulated what happens
around this spinning black hole.
Space gets dragged around with the black hole
taking you and the particles along with it.
When you get closer, space gets dragged around
faster and faster until it goes around faster
than the speed of light,
you've now entered into the first new region,
the ergosphere.
No matter how hard you fire your rockets here,
it's impossible to stay still relative to distance stars,
but because space doesn't flow directly inward,
you can still escape the black hole.
When you travel in further, you go through the next layer,
the outer horizon, the point of no return.
Here you can only go inwards,
but as you get dragged in deeper and deeper,
something crazy happens, you enter another region,
one where you can move around freely again,
so you're not doomed to the singularity.
You're now inside the inner event horizon.
Here you can actually see the singularity
- In a normal black hole, it's a point,
but it in a rotating black hole,
it actually expands out to be a ring
and there are weird things happened
with spacetime inside the center of a black hole,
a rotating black hole,
but it's thought that you can actually
fly through the singularity.
- [Derek] We need a Penrose diagram
of a spinning black hole, where before the singularity
was a horizontal line at the top
here, the singularity lifts up and moves to the sides,
revealing this new region inside the inner horizon.
Here we can move around freely and avoid the singularity,
but these edges aren't at infinity or a singularity,
so there must be something beyond them.
Well, when you venture further,
you could find yourself in a white hole,
which would push you out into a whole nother universe.
- You can have these pictures whereby
you're in one universe, you fall into a rotating black hole,
you fly through the singularity,
and you pop out into a new universe from a white hole,
and then you can just continue playing this game.
- Extending this diagram infinitely far.
but there is still one thing we haven't done,
brave the singularity.
So you aim straight towards the center of the ring
and head off towards it, but rather than time ending,
you now find yourself in universe, a strange universe,
one where gravity pushes instead of pulls.
This is known as an anti-verse.
If that's too weird, you can always jump back
across the singularity and return to a universe
with normal gravity.
- And I know this is basically science fiction, right?
But if you take the solutions of relativity at,
you know, essentially at face value and add on a little bit,
which is what Penrose does here, he says this,
"oh look, these shapes are very similar,
I can just stick these together."
Then this is the conclusion that you get.
Now we have effectively an infinite number
of universes all connected with black hole, white holes
all the way through and you, of you go to explore,
but it'll be a very brave person who's the first one
who's gonna leap into a rotating black hole
to find out if this is correct?
(Derek chuckles)
- Yeah, I would not sign up for that.
So could these maximally extended Schwarzschild
and Kerr solutions actually exist in nature?
Well, there are some issues.
Both the extended Schwarzschild and Kerr solutions
are solutions of eternal black holes in an empty universe.
- As you say, it's an eternal solution.
So it stretches infinitely far into the past
and infinitely far into the future
and so there's no formation mechanism in there,
it's just a static solution
and I think that is part of the,
part of the reason why black holes
are realized in our universe and white holes aren't-
- Or might not be.
- Or might not be,
or I'm reasonably I,
personally, I'm reasonably confident
that they don't exist, right?
- [Derek] For the maximally extended Kerr solution,
there's also another problem.
If you're an immortal astronaut inside the universe,
you can send light into the black hole,
but because there's infinite time compressed
in this top corner, you can pile up light along this edge,
which creates an infinite flux of energy
along the inner horizon.
This concentration of energy
then creates its own singularity,
sealing off the ring singularity and beyond.
- My suspicion and the suspicion
of some other people in the field is that
this inner horizon will become singular
and you will not be able to go through these second copies.
- So all the white holes, wormholes, other universes
and anti universes disappear.
Does that mean that real wormholes are impossible?
In 1987, Michael Morris and Kip Thorne looked at wormholes
that an advanced civilization could use
for interstellar travel, ones that have no horizons,
so you can travel back and forth, are stable in time,
and have some other properties like
being able to construct them.
They found several geometries that are allowed
by Einstein's general relativity.
In theory, these could connect different parts
of the universe, making a sort of interstellar highway.
They might even be able to connect to different universes.
The only problem is that all these geometries
require an exotic kind of matter
with a negative energy density
to prevent the wormhole from collapsing.
- This exotic kind of matter,
is really against the loss of physics, so it's,
I have the prejudice that it will not exist.
I'm bothered by the fact that we say that
the science fiction wormholes are mathematically possible.
It's true, it's mathematically possible
in the sense that there's some geometry that can exist,
but Einstein's theory is not just geometries,
it's geometries plus field equations.
If you use the kinds of properties of matter
that matter actually has, then they're not possible.
So I feel that the reason they're not possible
is very strong.
- So according to our current best understanding,
it seems likely that white holes, traversable wormholes,
and these parallel universes don't exist,
but we also used to think that black holes didn't exist.
So maybe we'll be surprised again.
- I mean, we have one universe, right?
Good, why can't we have two.
(whimsical music)
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