Black hole information paradox

Creator
Creator
Alan JoAlan Jo
Created
Created
2023 May 9 14:21
Editor
Editor
Alan JoAlan Jo
Edited
Edited
2023 May 9 14:24
정보가 블랙홀에서 파괴될 수 있는지
영국 서식스대학교의 캘멋 박사 연구팀은 주위 공간으로 새어나오는 중력자를 통해 이 역설이 해결될 수 있음을 제시
블랙홀이 실제로 정보를 어떤 방식으로든 물질에서 분리해서 보관하고 있고, 인류가 이것을 발견하고 해독하다면 우주의 도서관
 
 
 
 
Black hole information paradox
The black hole information paradox is a puzzle that appears when the predictions of quantum mechanics and general relativity are combined. The theory of general relativity predicts the existence of black holes that are regions of spacetime from which nothing — not even light — can escape. In the 1970s, Stephen Hawking applied the rules of quantum mechanics to such systems and found that an isolated black hole would emit a form of radiation called Hawking radiation. Hawking also argued that the detailed form of the radiation would be independent of the initial state of the black hole and would depend only on its mass, electric charge and angular momentum. The information paradox appears when one considers a process in which a black hole is formed through a physical process and then evaporates away entirely through Hawking radiation. Hawking's calculation suggests that the final state of radiation would retain information only about the total mass, electric charge and angular momentum of the initial state. Since many different states can have the same mass, charge and angular momentum this suggests that many initial physical states could evolve into the same final state. Therefore, information about the details of the initial state would be permanently lost. However, this violates a core precept of both classical and quantum physics—that, in principle, the state of a system at one point in time should determine its value at any other time. Specifically, in quantum mechanics the state of the system is encoded by its wave function. The evolution of the wave function is determined by a unitary operator, and unitarity implies that the wave function at any instant of time can be used to determine the wave function either in the past or the future.
Black hole information paradox
 

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