Can Black Holes Unify General Relativity & Quantum Mechanics?

PBS Space Time
23 May 202415:18

Summary

TLDRThis episode delves into the black hole information paradox and the concept of black hole complementarity, which suggests that quantum information can exist both inside a black hole and as Hawking radiation without violating unitarity. The script explores the Penrose diagram to illustrate the different perspectives of observers, highlighting the impossibility of simultaneous observation of quantum states. It raises questions about the nature of existence and the relativity of quantum states to observers, hinting at a deeper understanding of the universe that unites general relativity and quantum mechanics.

Takeaways

  • šŸŒŒ The script discusses the conflict between general relativity and quantum mechanics, particularly focusing on black holes and the black hole information paradox.
  • šŸ” Black holes are significant in theoretical physics because they present inconsistencies between general relativity and quantum mechanics, potentially leading to a unified theory.
  • šŸ’” The black hole information paradox suggests that black holes may violate either general relativity or quantum mechanics principles when a quantum bit (qubit) is taken into a black hole.
  • šŸŒ Black hole complementarity, proposed by Leonard Susskind, is a solution to the paradox suggesting that no contradiction exists between the two theories when viewed from different observer perspectives.
  • šŸ•Šļø The concept of black hole complementarity implies that quantum information can be both inside a black hole and radiated away as Hawking radiation without violating unitarity, as no observer can witness both states simultaneously.
  • šŸ“ˆ The Penrose diagram is used to illustrate the spacetime of a black hole and the paths of light and objects near the event horizon.
  • šŸ•’ The script explains that due to the finite speed of light, the simultaneity of the existence of quantum information in two places cannot be verified by any single observer.
  • šŸ¤” Black hole complementarity raises questions about the nature of existence and reality, suggesting that our understanding of the universe may be observer-dependent.
  • šŸŒˆ The script touches on the holographic principle, hinting that the interior and exterior of black holes might be different descriptions of the same quantum system.
  • šŸ”„ Alternative solutions to the black hole information paradox, such as black hole firewalls, are mentioned, indicating ongoing debates in theoretical physics.
  • šŸŽ The episode concludes with acknowledgments to supporters and mentions of new merchandise available in the store.

Q & A

  • What is the black hole information paradox?

    -The black hole information paradox is a conflict that arises when considering the fate of information that falls into a black hole. According to general relativity, the information is lost forever as it crosses the event horizon, which contradicts the principle of quantum mechanics that information must be conserved.

  • What is black hole complementarity and who formulated it?

    -Black hole complementarity is a proposed solution to the black hole information paradox. It suggests that there is no contradiction because the same quantum information can be inside the black hole as measured by one observer and frozen on the surface or radiated away in Hawking radiation according to another. It was formulated by Leonard Susskind and others in the early 1990s.

  • How does the Penrose diagram represent spacetime?

    -A Penrose diagram is a graphical representation of spacetime that is used to visualize the structure of a black hole. It compresses space and time so that they bend into each other, with light always traveling at a 45-degree angle. This diagram allows for the visualization of an infinite distance and time at the boundaries, and it is useful for understanding the behavior of objects near the event horizon of a black hole.

  • What is the significance of the event horizon in the context of black holes?

    -The event horizon is the boundary around a black hole beyond which nothing can escape, not even light. It is significant because it marks the point of no return for any matter or radiation that crosses it, leading to the information paradox as the information about what has crossed the event horizon seems to be lost.

  • What is the concept of unitarity in quantum mechanics?

    -Unitarity in quantum mechanics refers to the conservation of quantum information. It is a fundamental principle that states that quantum information cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed. The violation of unitarity in the context of black holes would imply that information can be lost, which challenges the principles of quantum mechanics.

  • What is the role of the equivalence principle in the black hole information paradox?

    -The equivalence principle, a fundamental axiom of general relativity, states that an observer cannot detect anything unusual when crossing the event horizon of a black hole. This principle leads to the paradox because it implies that an observer falling into a black hole would not notice anything out of the ordinary, contradicting the idea that quantum information is lost.

  • How does the concept of Hawking radiation relate to the black hole information paradox?

    -Hawking radiation is a theoretical process by which black holes can lose mass and eventually evaporate. It is related to the black hole information paradox because it is suggested that information about the matter that fell into the black hole could be released back into the universe through this radiation, potentially resolving the paradox.

  • What is the Page time and why is it significant in the context of black hole complementarity?

    -The Page time is the point at which a black hole has evaporated to half its original size. It is significant because, according to physicist Don Page, only after this time can quantum information get back out of the black hole. This is the time when an observer might potentially see both the swallowed and radiated versions of a quantum bit, although black hole complementarity argues that this is still impossible.

  • What is the holographic principle and how does it relate to black hole complementarity?

    -The holographic principle is a concept in theoretical physics suggesting that a lower-dimensional system can be described by a higher-dimensional boundary. It relates to black hole complementarity by proposing that the interior and exterior of a black hole are different descriptions of the same quantum system, with the boundary and its interior being different ways to talk about the same thing.

  • What are the implications of black hole complementarity for our understanding of existence and reality?

    -Black hole complementarity challenges our traditional notions of existence and reality by suggesting that the existence of a quantum state may be relative to the observer. It implies that our description of the world and the fundamental laws of physics may depend on our reference frame, leading to a more relativistic view of the universe.

Outlines

00:00

šŸŒŒ Introduction to Black Holes and Theoretical Physics

The script opens with an introduction to the merch store and then delves into the complexities of black holes as predicted by general relativity, which describes space, time, and gravity. It contrasts these with quantum mechanics, which governs the subatomic world. The black hole information paradox is highlighted as a key conflict between these theories. The paradox arises when quantum information (qubits) is carried into a black hole, leading to a potential violation of quantum mechanics' principles. The script suggests that black holes might be the key to unifying these theories. Black hole complementarity, proposed by Leonard Susskind in the 1990s, is introduced as a solution that suggests no contradiction exists between the two states of the qubit as observed by different observers. The Penrose diagram is used to illustrate the spacetime around a black hole and the journey of the qubit as seen by Alice (inside the black hole) and Bob (outside).

05:05

šŸ”¬ The Black Hole Information Paradox and Complementarity

This paragraph explores the black hole information paradox in more detail, discussing the Penrose diagram for a black hole that forms from a collapsed star and eventually evaporates through Hawking radiation. It describes the paths of the qubit as seen by Alice and Bob, leading to a potential violation of unitarity if the qubit is considered to exist in two places simultaneously. The script then examines the concept of 'existing simultaneously' and the limitations of verifying such a state due to the finite speed of light and the observer's past light-cone. Black hole complementarity is presented as a solution that argues there's no violation of unitarity because no single observer can measure both states of the qubit. The Hayden-Preskill thought experiment is mentioned, which shows it's impossible for any observer to see both the Hawking-radiated and swallowed versions of the qubit, supporting the idea of black hole complementarity.

10:11

šŸŒ Interpretations of Black Hole Complementarity and Its Implications

The final paragraph discusses various interpretations of black hole complementarity and its implications for our understanding of quantum mechanics and the nature of existence. The first interpretation suggests that unitarity and the conservation of quantum information are maintained relative to a given observer, implying that the description of the world can be radically dependent on the observer's reference frame. The second interpretation posits that the interior and exterior descriptions of quantum information are equivalent, reflecting a form of holography where a lower-dimensional system can be described as a higher-dimensional one. The script also mentions the concept of black hole firewalls as an alternative to complementarity, which will be explored in an upcoming episode. The paragraph concludes by reflecting on the broader implications of black holes for our understanding of the universe, suggesting that they may reveal a deeper reality where descriptions of the world are relative and interiors of black holes or universes may be equivalent to their surfaces.

Mindmap

Keywords

šŸ’”General Relativity

General Relativity is a theory of gravity proposed by Albert Einstein, which describes gravity not as a force, but as a curvature of spacetime caused by mass and energy. In the video, it is mentioned as our best theory of space, time, and gravity and is highlighted as clashing with quantum mechanics, particularly in the context of black holes.

šŸ’”Quantum Mechanics

Quantum Mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that describes the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. The script discusses how quantum mechanics conflicts with general relativity, especially when considering the behavior of matter and information near black holes.

šŸ’”Black Hole Information Paradox

The Black Hole Information Paradox refers to a problem in theoretical physics where the predictions of quantum mechanics seem to be violated by the behavior of black holes, specifically the loss of information about physical states that fall into a black hole. The video delves into this paradox, suggesting that black holes might either violate quantum mechanics or general relativity.

šŸ’”Black Hole Complementarity

Black Hole Complementarity is a proposed solution to the information paradox, suggesting that an object falling into a black hole appears both inside the black hole and in the Hawking radiation to different observers without any actual contradiction. The concept is central to the video's exploration of how we might reconcile the paradoxes arising from the intersection of general relativity and quantum mechanics.

šŸ’”Event Horizon

The Event Horizon is the boundary around a black hole beyond which nothing can escape, not even light. In the script, it is described as the point where Alice, carrying a qubit into a black hole, would cross without sensing anything unusual due to the equivalence principle of general relativity.

šŸ’”Hawking Radiation

Hawking Radiation is a theoretical prediction made by physicist Stephen Hawking that black holes are not completely black but emit small amounts of thermal radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon. The script discusses how this radiation is relevant to the information paradox and the proposed solution of black hole complementarity.

šŸ’”Quantum Bit (Qubit)

A Quantum Bit, or Qubit, is the fundamental unit of quantum information, analogous to the classical bit but with the ability to exist in multiple states simultaneously due to quantum superposition. The video uses the example of a qubit being carried into a black hole to illustrate the information paradox.

šŸ’”Penrose Diagram

A Penrose Diagram is a graphical representation of the spacetime of a universe, often used to visualize black holes and their event horizons. The script uses the Penrose Diagram to explain the different perspectives of Alice and Bob regarding the fate of a qubit near a black hole.

šŸ’”Unitarity

Unitarity in quantum mechanics refers to the property that quantum information is conserved and that the evolution of a quantum system is described by a unitary operator. The script discusses how the black hole information paradox seems to violate unitarity, leading to the proposal of black hole complementarity.

šŸ’”Holographic Principle

The Holographic Principle is a concept in theoretical physics suggesting that the information contained within a volume of space can be represented on the boundary to the same space. The video touches on this principle in the context of black hole complementarity, suggesting that the interior and exterior of a black hole might be different descriptions of the same quantum system.

šŸ’”Unruh Radiation

Unruh Radiation is a prediction in quantum field theory that an accelerating observer will observe a thermal bath of particles, akin to black body radiation. The script briefly mentions Unruh radiation as an example of how the existence of a particle can depend on the observer's acceleration, which parallels the ideas discussed in black hole complementarity.

Highlights

Black holes are inevitable predictions of general relativity but clash with quantum mechanics.

The black hole information paradox challenges our understanding of quantum mechanics and general relativity.

Black hole complementarity, proposed by Leonard Susskind, suggests no contradiction exists between the two theories.

According to black hole complementarity, quantum information can be both inside and outside a black hole without contradiction.

The Penrose diagram is used to visualize the spacetime of a universe with a black hole.

The concept of 'simultaneous existence' is explored in the context of a black hole's event horizon.

The impossibility of observing both the interior and exterior states of a black hole is a key aspect of black hole complementarity.

The unobservability of duplicated qubits suggests a fundamental principle about the nature of existence in quantum mechanics.

Black hole complementarity implies that the conservation of quantum information holds relative to a given observer.

The concept of holography is related to black hole complementarity, suggesting that lower-dimensional systems can describe higher-dimensional ones.

Black hole complementarity is not the only solution to the black hole information paradox; other theories like firewalls exist.

The idea that our description of the world is relative to our reference frame is a radical implication of black hole complementarity.

The existence of a particle can depend on the acceleration of an observer, as seen in the Unruh radiation episode.

The holographic principle suggests that our universe's interior may have a dual description on its distant surface.

Support for the channel includes Patreon contributions, which help in the production of episodes.

New merchandise items are added to the PBS Spacetime shop, including T-shirts and hoodies.

Transcripts

00:00

Hey Everyone. Before we get to the episode,Ā Ā 

00:01

just a heads up we have two new items at theĀ  merch store. Thereā€™s a link in the description

00:07

Black holes are inevitable predictions ofĀ  general relativityā€”our best theory of space,Ā Ā 

00:12

time and gravity. But they clash inĀ  multiple ways with quantum mechanics,Ā Ā 

00:16

our equally successful description of theĀ  subatomic world. One such clash is theĀ Ā 

00:21

black hole information paradoxā€”and a proposedĀ  solutionā€”black hole complementarityā€”may forcedĀ Ā 

00:28

us to radically rethink what it evenĀ  means for something to exist.

00:39

We know that our universe is fundamentallyĀ  self-consistentā€”otherwise what are we evenĀ Ā 

00:44

doing trying to science it. But that means whenĀ a contradiction appears in our scientificĀ Ā 

00:49

description of the universe, we know something isĀ  wrong with that description. Itā€™s really excitingĀ Ā 

00:55

when this happens because the nature of theĀ  inconsistency can point the way to a better, moreĀ Ā 

01:01

encompassing scientific description. Black holesĀ  are one of the favourite tools of the theoreticalĀ Ā 

01:07

physicist because they lead to multipleĀ  inconsistencies between general relativityĀ Ā 

01:11

and quantum mechanics, and so may be our bestĀ  path to the grander theory that unites the two.

01:17

The conflict we looked at recently is the blackĀ  hole information paradox, and itā€™s not a badĀ Ā 

01:22

idea to watch that episode before this. In it,Ā  our intrepid heroes of the gedankenexperiment,Ā Ā 

01:29

Alice and Bob, discovered that black holes mustĀ  violate either a fundamental principle of generalĀ Ā 

01:34

relativity or of quantum mechanics. When AliceĀ  carries a quantum bitā€”a qubitā€”into a black hole,Ā Ā 

01:41

she witnesses the qubit cross the eventĀ  horizon. She must, because according toĀ Ā 

01:46

the equivalence principleā€”a founding axiom ofĀ  general relativityā€”Alice canā€™t sense anythingĀ Ā 

01:51

unusual when crossing that horizon. Meanwhile,Ā  Bob, watching from afar, has to either witnessĀ Ā 

01:58

the qubit escape in the Hawking radiation leakedĀ  as the black hole evaporates, or the qubit vanish foreverĀ Ā 

02:05

in that evaporation. In the first case,Ā  the qubit is duplicatedā€”itā€™s both insideĀ Ā 

02:10

and outside the black hole. In the second itā€™sĀ  annihilated. Either way, a foundational principleĀ Ā 

02:15

of quantum mechanicsā€”conservation of quantumĀ  information or unitarity appears to be violated.

02:21

Because both the equivalence principleĀ  and unitarity are fundamental to theirĀ Ā 

02:26

respective theories, we know something must beĀ  wrong with our understanding of what happensĀ Ā 

02:29

to quantum information in a black hole.Ā  There have been various proposed solutions,Ā Ā 

02:34

but today Iā€™m going to focus on one of theĀ  earliest, and perhaps the least intuitiveā€”andĀ Ā 

02:38

thatā€™s black hole complementarity, formulatedĀ  by Leonard Susskind and others in the early 90s.

02:43

Black hole complementarity states that thereĀ  actually is no contradiction. It proposes thatĀ Ā 

02:49

itā€™s fine for the same quantum information to beĀ  inside the black hole as measured by one observer,Ā Ā 

02:54

and frozen on the surface or radiatedĀ  away in Hawking radiation according toĀ Ā 

02:58

another. And according to ā€œBHCā€ this is fineĀ  because no one can ever observe both states,Ā Ā 

03:05

so no one can prove that unitarityĀ  was broken, which means it ā€¦ wasnā€™t?

03:11

To get our heads around this, letā€™s start byĀ  making the conflict much more precise. To doĀ Ā 

03:15

that weā€™re going to use the same black hole mapĀ  that proper black hole theorists like to useā€”theĀ Ā 

03:19

Penrose diagram. Without a black hole, a PenroseĀ  diagram looks like this. Up is roughly speakingĀ Ā 

03:24

the forward time direction, and left and rightĀ  are roughly one spatial dimension. But space andĀ Ā 

03:29

time are rescaled so they bend into each otherĀ  and pile up towards the boundaries. Tick marksĀ Ā 

03:34

are drawn closer together so that the borderĀ of the graph represents infinite distance and infinite past or future. AndĀ Ā 

03:41

all of this is done in just such a way so thatĀ  light will always travel a 45 degree path. AllĀ Ā 

03:45

sub-lightspeed travel has to take a steeperĀ  slopeā€”more time taken to travel less space.

03:52

Near an event horizon of a black holeĀ  we can think of spacetime as beingĀ Ā 

03:55

infinitely stretched from the point of view ofĀ  a distant observer. That means we can just sayĀ Ā 

03:59

one of these boundaries is our event horizon,Ā  and add the interior of the black hole on theĀ Ā 

04:04

other side. In these coordinates, the centralĀ  singularity looks like the top of the PenroseĀ Ā 

04:09

diagram is cut offā€”that represents the cessationĀ  of space and time inside the black hole. For nowĀ Ā 

04:14

youā€™ll have to take my word that this is a validĀ  way to draw the spacetime of a universe with aĀ Ā 

04:19

black hole, but we have other videos on theĀ  Penrose diagram if you need more convincing.

04:24

Letā€™s see what Aliceā€™s black hole expeditionĀ  looks like on the Penrose diagram. Both SheĀ Ā 

04:30

and Bob move up in time, while Alice andĀ  the qubit also move closer to the eventĀ Ā 

04:34

horizon. Light from the qubit reaches AliceĀ  and then Bob, carrying information about theĀ Ā 

04:39

qubitā€™s locationā€”its past locationĀ  by the time Alice or Bob see it.

04:44

Approaching the event horizon, those photonsĀ  still reach Alice quickly but take longer andĀ Ā 

04:49

longer to reach Bob. Photons traveling fromĀ  just above the event horizon only reach BobĀ Ā 

04:53

in the far future. No photon emitted below theĀ  event horizon can ever reach Bob, so to himĀ Ā 

04:59

the qubit and Alice are frozen just aboveĀ  the event horizon. Those photons emittedĀ Ā 

05:05

inside the black hole are doomed to hit theĀ  singularity, as is the qubit. As is Alice.

05:11

The diagram weā€™ve been using is for a blackĀ  hole thatā€™s always been there and alwaysĀ Ā 

05:15

will be. Real black holes typically formĀ  from collapsed stars, and they also leakĀ Ā 

05:19

Hawking radiation until they disappear. Hereā€™sĀ  how we might depict such a black hole. We haveĀ Ā 

05:24

a Penrose diagram for the universe where theĀ  black hole forms somewhere in space when aĀ Ā 

05:29

collapsing star forms an event horizon. ThenĀ  it evaporates by Hawking radiation. We onlyĀ Ā 

05:35

need half of this map because, well, nothingĀ  going in one side ever comes out the other.

05:42

Letā€™s look at just the qubitā€™s path. AccordingĀ  to both Alice and Bob it falls and reaches theĀ Ā 

05:46

event horizon. According to just Alice it entersĀ  the black hole and hits the singularity. Bob,Ā Ā 

05:53

on the other hand, sees it freeze on theĀ  horizon and emerge again as Hawking radiation.Ā Ā 

05:57

It emerges only after the black hole is at leastĀ  half-evaporated because, according to physicistĀ Ā 

06:02

Don Page, before that point the information inĀ  the emitted radiation is hopelessly scrambled.

06:08

From a perspective outside space and time, theĀ  quantum bit in some sense exists at all of theseĀ Ā 

06:15

spacetime points, but does it ever exist inĀ  two physical locations simultaneouslyā€”at theĀ Ā 

06:22

same instant time? Well thereā€™s no absoluteĀ  definition of ā€œsimultaneousā€ in Einsteinā€™sĀ Ā 

06:27

relative universe. But these lines on the PenroseĀ  diagram could be considered to describe differentĀ Ā 

06:32

spatial locations at the same moment inĀ  time. Therefore, for anything duplicatedĀ Ā 

06:37

on one of these lines, the copies can beĀ  thought of as existing at the same time.

06:42

So, before it hits the event horizonĀ  thereā€™s only one qubit. After the blackĀ Ā 

06:47

hole evaporates thereā€™s only one qubitā€”theĀ  one leaked out in Hawking photons. ButĀ Ā 

06:52

between its entry into the black hole andĀ  the black holeā€™s evaporation we can argueĀ Ā 

06:57

that the qubit exists simultaneouslyĀ  in two places, violating unitarity.

07:04

The key to this is to really dig into whatĀ  we mean by ā€œexisting simultaneouslyā€. DueĀ Ā 

07:09

to the finite travel time of light, we canĀ  only confirm simultaneous existence at twoĀ Ā 

07:15

spacetime points after the light from bothĀ  reaches us. On our original Penrose diagram,Ā Ā 

07:21

we only have information about the parts of theĀ  universe from which signals traveling at theĀ Ā 

07:25

speed of light or lower could reach usā€”thatā€™s ourĀ  past light-cone. This is the only region in whichĀ Ā 

07:32

we can verify simultaneityā€”and we can only verifyĀ  that things existed simultaneously after the fact.

07:40

But if we try to do that for our duplicatedĀ  qubits, we see that there is no past lightĀ Ā 

07:44

coneā€”no possible observerā€”who can ever verifyĀ  that both exist at the same time. Alice sees one,Ā Ā 

07:52

Bob sees the other, but no one can ever seeĀ  both. Black hole complementarity argues thatĀ Ā 

07:57

the impossibility of any one observerĀ  measuring both qubits means that thereā€™sĀ Ā 

08:02

no violation of unitarity, so thereā€™s noĀ  contradiction. Before we pick that apart,Ā Ā 

08:06

letā€™s make sure itā€™s really impossible for anyĀ  one observer to see both the Hawking-radiatedĀ Ā 

08:13

and the swallowed versions of the qubit. Physicists Bill Hayden and John PreskillĀ Ā 

08:19

figured out the best chance of one observer seeingĀ  both. The thought experiment goes like this:

08:25

Alice jumps into the black hole with the quantumĀ  bit just before the black hole is half evaporatedĀ Ā 

08:31

because she knows that only after this so-calledĀ  Page time can quantum information get back out.Ā Ā 

08:37

Below the event horizon she tries to send theĀ  qubit upwards. She knows it canā€™t re-cross theĀ Ā 

08:42

event horizon, but it will slow the qubitā€™sĀ  descent to give Bob more time to catch it.Ā Ā 

08:47

And now Bob also drops into the black hole. HeĀ  times the leap exquisitely so that he catchesĀ Ā 

08:53

the Hawking-radiated qubit on its way out, and hopes to also see the swallowedĀ Ā 

08:57

qubit once inside. And ā€¦ he misses it. EvenĀ  with the most perfectly timed experiment,Ā Ā 

09:04

Hayden and Preskill show that Bob will alwaysĀ  barely miss being able to see both qubits.

09:10

So it seems that nature is working awfullyĀ  hard to make it impossible for anyone toĀ Ā 

09:14

see both versions of the qubit. So maybeĀ  the unobservability of the cloned qubitsĀ Ā 

09:19

is telling us something fundamental. That wouldĀ  be the argument of black hole complementarity,Ā Ā 

09:24

which states that, because itā€™sĀ  impossible for anyone to observeĀ Ā 

09:27

both qubits, thereā€™s no contradictionā€”noĀ  violation of unitarityā€”for both to exist.

09:34

This sounds like some sort of weirdĀ  quantum stuff. And complementarityĀ Ā 

09:38

is indeed fundamental to quantum mechanics.Ā  For example, there are complementary quantumĀ Ā 

09:43

properties like position and momentum thatĀ  can never be measured perfectly at the sameĀ Ā 

09:48

time. Or complementary descriptions like theĀ  wave-like versus particle-like behavior ofĀ Ā 

09:53

a quantum object. The word complementarityĀ  implies a connection to quantum mechanics,Ā Ā 

09:58

but the connection isnā€™t clear. For blackĀ  hole complementarity there are differentĀ Ā 

10:03

interpretations, which are still argued over,Ā  and which arenā€™t even necessarily mutually exclusive.

10:10

So interpretation 1): If blackĀ  hole complementarity is right,Ā Ā 

10:14

it may be telling us that, while unitarity and theĀ  conservation of quantum information always hold,Ā Ā 

10:20

the way they hold is relative to a givenĀ  observer. Alice will always find that quantumĀ Ā 

10:25

mechanics works perfectly and that thereĀ  are never any contradictions. So will Bob,Ā Ā 

10:31

but for him quantum mechanics might workĀ  perfectly in a different way. The key isĀ Ā 

10:37

that if Alice and Bob can never communicate,Ā  no contradiction is ever discovered. If this isĀ Ā 

10:43

right then itā€™s telling us something about whatĀ  the wavefunction and quantum information reallyĀ Ā 

10:47

represent and that our description of the worldĀ  depends quite radically on our reference frame.Ā Ā 

10:55

Even a concept as basic as the existence of aĀ  quantum state may be relative to the observer.Ā Ā 

11:01

Itā€™s not the only hint at this uncomfortableĀ  ideaā€”for example, the existence of a particle canĀ Ā 

11:06

depend on the acceleration of an observer, as weĀ  saw in our Unruh radiation episode. Interestingly,Ā Ā 

11:12

both Unruh radiation and black holeĀ  complementarity involve uncrossable horizons.

11:19

So interpretation 2) for black hole complementarityĀ  is that the interior and exterior descriptions ofĀ Ā 

11:25

the quantum information are, in a sense,Ā  equivalent. Or rather they are differentĀ Ā 

11:31

descriptions of what is fundamentally the oneĀ  quantum system. Thereā€™s no duplication becauseĀ Ā 

11:36

the interior and exterior of the black holeĀ  are different descriptions of the same abstractĀ Ā 

11:42

quantum system. This is a form of holography,Ā  in which a lower dimensional system can beĀ Ā 

11:47

equally-well described as a system one dimensionĀ  higherā€”a boundary and its interior becomeĀ Ā 

11:53

different ways to talk about the same thing. Weā€™veĀ  talked about holographic principle beforeā€”itā€™s anĀ Ā 

11:58

idea that can be extended well beyond blackĀ  holes, even suggesting that the interior ofĀ Ā 

12:02

our universe may have a dual and complementaryĀ  description on its infinitely distant surface.

12:09

Black hole complementarity is by no meansĀ  the accepted solution to the black holeĀ Ā 

12:13

information paradox. We havenā€™t talkedĀ  about black hole firewalls yetā€”in whichĀ Ā 

12:18

an extreme energy screen just above the eventĀ  horizon fries anything that tries to enter,Ā Ā 

12:23

eliminating any duplication of qubits but alsoĀ  violating the equivalence principle. In an episodeĀ Ā 

12:29

coming very soon weā€™ll see why some physicistsĀ  think the firewall must exist, and also why theĀ Ā 

12:35

firewall may not free us from the strangenessĀ  of black hole complementarity or vice versa.

12:42

So, yeah, black holes are contradictions.Ā  They are holes in the universe and in ourĀ Ā 

12:47

understanding of it. But through those holesĀ  weā€™re glimpsing grander visions of what ourĀ Ā 

12:50

universe might really be. For example, thatĀ  thereā€™s a sort of extreme relativity to ourĀ Ā 

12:56

description of the world, or that the interiorsĀ  of black holes and of universes may be in aĀ Ā 

13:02

weird way equivalent to their surfacesā€”each theĀ  warped reflection of a complementary spacetime.

13:09

There are lots of ways to support this channel.Ā  Liking and subscribing helps a ton. Watching whenĀ Ā 

13:13

you get the notification is super valuable forĀ  appeasing the almighty YouTube algorithm. AndĀ Ā 

13:18

perhaps the thing that's been the most importantĀ  for the longevity of the series is Patreon. EvenĀ Ā 

13:23

a couple of bucks a month is a big deal for usĀ  and it gets you access to the spacetime DiscordĀ Ā 

13:27

and our monthly live hangout. And if you'reĀ  already a supporter, we can't thank you enough.

13:33

Now, today, I want to give an extra specialĀ  thank you to John Sronce who supporting us atĀ Ā 

13:38

the Big Bang level. John, we've used someĀ  of your contribution to beat this episodeĀ Ā 

13:43

along with this shout out to be included on theĀ  event horizon of the Cygnus X-1 black hole. Now,Ā Ā 

13:49

in around ten to the power of 71 years, thisĀ  will be radiated back out as hawking radiation,Ā Ā 

13:55

ensuring that even the end of theĀ  universe is reminded of your generosity.

14:01

How do you do fellow simulations? Before we endĀ  the episode, I just wanted to let you know thatĀ Ā 

14:06

we are adding a couple new permanent itemsĀ  to the merch store. Back by popular demandĀ Ā 

14:11

is the return of the Be Quiet The Devs WillĀ  Notice T-shirt, which now also available forĀ Ā 

14:17

the first time as a hoodie. And we also haveĀ  our new How Do You Do fellow simulations,Ā Ā 

14:23

T-shirt and sweatshirt. For those of you who'dĀ  like to blend more seamlessly into the simulation,Ā Ā 

14:29

whatever your stance is on your virtual existence,Ā Ā 

14:32

we've got you covered at our very virtualĀ  marketplace over at pbsspacetime.com/shop.

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Related Tags
Black HolesQuantum MechanicsGeneral RelativityInformation ParadoxHawking RadiationEvent HorizonPenrose DiagramSpacetimeTheoretical PhysicsScientific Exploration