What Happens To Quantum Information Inside A Black Hole?

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  • Опубліковано 30 кві 2024
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    Meet Alice and Bob, famous explorers of the abstract landscape of theoretical physics. Heroes of the gerdankenexperiment-the thought experiment-whose life mission is to find contradictions in the deepest layers of our theories. Today our intrepid pair are jumping into a black hole. Again. Why? Well, to determine the fundamental structure of spacetime and its connection to quantum entanglement of course.
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    Written by Matt O'Dowd
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,5 тис.

  • @THE-X-Force
    @THE-X-Force 13 днів тому +705

    It's comforting to know that ancient PBS Space Time videos will still be around even when Sag A* meets its end.

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 13 днів тому +9

      As quantum information

    • @THE-X-Force
      @THE-X-Force 13 днів тому +19

      @@LuisSierra42 I dunno .. sounds like Bob was watching the vintage originals lol

    • @uggoldos
      @uggoldos 13 днів тому

      Hopelessly scrambled

    • @BrianOSheaPlus
      @BrianOSheaPlus 13 днів тому +4

      ​@@uggoldosBob's star-sized Matrioshka brain computers can unscramble them.

    • @uggoldos
      @uggoldos 13 днів тому +3

      But can the Matrioshka overcome uncertainty? Seems like the same problem Star Trek's transporter technology would have.

  • @Orillion123456
    @Orillion123456 13 днів тому +324

    I love the idea that a future mind-uploading device requires you to breakdance on top of it while it uploads you.

    • @richardconway6425
      @richardconway6425 13 днів тому +2

      I think you'll find that you put the device on your head. For convenience, of course.
      Remember, there is no up or down in space, just round and round ...
      ratt 😜

    • @John-jc3ty
      @John-jc3ty 13 днів тому +14

      its part of the physic process. he breaks his neck to avoid having 2 bobs at the same time and breaking unitarity

    • @gage11769
      @gage11769 13 днів тому +6

      I loved that part so much lol. Just do a headspin on this device while it WHARGARBLS your brain into a digital copy and then just let your deceased body flop onto the ground.

    • @bmxerkrantz
      @bmxerkrantz 12 днів тому +1

      ​​@@richardconway6425your comment spins me right round baby right round
      - dead or alive

    • @richardconway6425
      @richardconway6425 12 днів тому

      @@bmxerkrantz yes, that too !! 🐸

  • @JBonzo12
    @JBonzo12 13 днів тому +142

    "Bob waited 10^87 years, so a week isn't so bad. "
    I'm now dead in this timeline. 🤣

  • @_Mute_
    @_Mute_ 13 днів тому +524

    "Digital Ghosts in a Dead Universe" would make a great metal album name

    • @Annathroy
      @Annathroy 13 днів тому +17

      Band name too

    • @unocoltrane2804
      @unocoltrane2804 13 днів тому +12

      DGIDU!

    • @b.s.7693
      @b.s.7693 13 днів тому +4

      ​@@Annathroyand the first single

    • @WackoMcGoose
      @WackoMcGoose 13 днів тому +3

      I think it's also within the allowed length limit of a Dot Tumblr Dot Com, too...

    • @whoshotashleybabbitt4924
      @whoshotashleybabbitt4924 13 днів тому +14

      @@b.s.7693 nah, Unitarity is the first single.

  • @purplenanite
    @purplenanite 13 днів тому +272

    10:36 "(Bob) is looking for signs of the experimental qubit. But if we're being honest, he's also looking for signs of Alice."
    awwww, that's so cute

    • @AM-gf7zv
      @AM-gf7zv 11 днів тому

      Staring at the last piece of ass he'll ever see... and desperately looking to reconstruct it for 10^74 years and more.

    • @davestrider2045
      @davestrider2045 11 днів тому +2

      11:22 He knows that quantum mechanics and, perhaps, his own heart. Why did this slowly become a romance?

    • @alazarbisrat1978
      @alazarbisrat1978 11 днів тому +3

      @@davestrider2045 Alice and Bob have been together since the start, of course someone had to ship them. So why not on a spaceship?

    • @Andrew30645
      @Andrew30645 11 днів тому +3

      She jumped into a black hole to get away from him. That puts things in a different light!

  • @mlee9734
    @mlee9734 13 днів тому +291

    Alice and Bob are 2 unsung heroes of our time. They have been involved in so many experiments I can't ever count. The have been thrown into black holes, left drifting on space for years, put into the heart of a supernova, they have even been shot through the universe at the speed of light and left to experience all the negative affects from it. And they never ever complain.

    • @sharpsheep4148
      @sharpsheep4148 13 днів тому +52

      They also exchange MANY messages that they would like to keep private. Presumably about their grand adventures. 😅

    • @apmcx
      @apmcx 13 днів тому +7

      Spherical Bob best bob

    • @w01dnick
      @w01dnick 13 днів тому +25

      Don't forget they are also experts in cryptography, network protocols.

    • @Ein_Kunde_
      @Ein_Kunde_ 13 днів тому

      They are invincible.

    • @TheSaneHatter
      @TheSaneHatter 13 днів тому +1

      But where are Carol and Ted . . .?

  • @AricBlunk
    @AricBlunk 13 днів тому +198

    Veritasium feels like a layman successfully reaching into the depths of science and bringing it back to us. PBS spacetime feels like a lifelong deep scientist successfully reaching out to the layman to explain things.

    • @fragly
      @fragly 13 днів тому +8

      😂 very accurate

    • @marcomoon6062
      @marcomoon6062 13 днів тому +6

      Both of them go over my head sometimes 😅

    • @cereal-killer4455
      @cereal-killer4455 13 днів тому +25

      @@marcomoon6062Spacetime is at a much higher level of science than veritasium although both are brilliant

    • @marfmarfalot5193
      @marfmarfalot5193 13 днів тому

      It is!

    • @kylelochlann5053
      @kylelochlann5053 13 днів тому +4

      Absolutely not. PBS is explaining one line of speculative reasoning.

  • @_haze__5684
    @_haze__5684 13 днів тому +56

    Pancakification will be a whole new section in our text books before long and you heard it here first, from one Matt O'Dowd.

    • @RichWoods23
      @RichWoods23 13 днів тому +1

      At least we won't go hungry.

    • @Anonymous-ow6jz
      @Anonymous-ow6jz 12 днів тому +1

      @@RichWoods23 yes, we have pancakes and spaghetti!

    • @bmxerkrantz
      @bmxerkrantz 12 днів тому

      ​@@Anonymous-ow6jz sooooo, what's for lunch?

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 12 днів тому

      @@Anonymous-ow6jz Human pancakes. So is that how Soylent Green is made?

  • @JuanEstrella-Martinez
    @JuanEstrella-Martinez 13 днів тому +890

    Oh man, you got Dereked!

  • @GwEClanGaming
    @GwEClanGaming 13 днів тому +163

    In the three body problem series (book 2) some guy fell into a black hole accidentally and they refused to pay out his life insurance because he wasn‘t dead yet from their point of reference 😂

    • @astrocoastalprocessor
      @astrocoastalprocessor 13 днів тому +26

      that sounds so plausible

    • @allanhernandez6692
      @allanhernandez6692 13 днів тому +12

      I mean, they're right technically speaking! He hasn't fallen in yet! And even after a millennia has passed for everyone else, from his perspective hardly any time has passed at all!
      That's the thing I don't fully get with these videos too. I fully understand that the person falling never experiences time slowing down (rather they would see the rest of the universe speeding up), but that doesn't mean that they actually cross the event horizon. That could only be true if black holes are actually eternal.
      From their perspective, the hawking radiation taking place must speed up as well and the black hole would evaporate. The event horizon would shrink as they approach it and they would evaporate themselves before they ever cross.

    • @WhyneedanAlias
      @WhyneedanAlias 13 днів тому +9

      @@allanhernandez6692 As far as I understood it, the person falling in would experience the universe speeding up to some degree, but not the entirety of the universes future would play out while crossing the event horizon. So for an outside observer it would take infinite time to see something cross the event horizon, but for a person falling the event horizon is no special location (if we keep the equivalence principle) so for them it would only take a finite amount of the outside universes time. So even for an evaporating black hole, stuff could fall in (from their own pov but not from an outside pov)

    • @Deletirium
      @Deletirium 13 днів тому +3

      ​​@@WhyneedanAliasRelativity is so incredibly weird.

    • @viliml2763
      @viliml2763 13 днів тому +1

      @@WhyneedanAlias That is not the reason why Alice would not experience the universe speeding up to infinity. It is simply because the photons from the dying universe would not have time to catch up with her until she's practically at the singularity, at which point she'll be dead.

  • @Subbestionix
    @Subbestionix 13 днів тому +135

    Degankenexperiment 😂
    For the non-germans: he pronounced the first two syllables of Gedankenexperiment (imaginary experiment, thought experiment) backwards - honestly not that noticeable or relevant, but had me smirk, so had to say it

    • @aaronhammond7297
      @aaronhammond7297 13 днів тому +12

      I noticed and I don't even speak German

    • @Subbestionix
      @Subbestionix 13 днів тому +6

      ​yeah xD
      But I can see how non native speakers could mix up de and ge without having practice in German or knowledge of how German words are assembled
      For the ones interested:
      ge- is a common prefix of words that have some punctuality.
      "Someone thought X" for example translates to "Jemand hat X gedacht", where "denken" is the stem of "to think".
      In this case however "Gedanken" is not the past tense of "to think" but rather like "thoughts" or "in my mind".
      It can also be more of a result of the thinking itself. It's like the entity of a thought or thoughts.

    • @dembro27
      @dembro27 13 днів тому +2

      I heard him say it the right way, but maybe my grasp of German pronunciation is just that bad.

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 13 днів тому +3

      I heard "degunken" (middle syllable /gəŋk/ like "gunk").

    • @charlesrockafellor4200
      @charlesrockafellor4200 13 днів тому +1

      I have little German, but mostly I come at it from an OCD and AS/HFA perspective, and being a geek means that I know that word intimately, so it leapt right out at me when he said it (though I was so surprised that I had to replay it a couple of times, and I still don't know how it got past the filming and editing crew).

  • @MarijnvdSterre
    @MarijnvdSterre 13 днів тому +51

    I know! You either die or end up behind some bookshelves.

    • @brothermine2292
      @brothermine2292 13 днів тому +1

      Or both. The blue-shifted rain of X-rays hitting you from above would be fatal.

    • @badbadrobotrobot959
      @badbadrobotrobot959 13 днів тому +3

      Thank God that at least you can't come out of the black hole by moving faster than the speed of light because of "the power of love".

    • @duprie37
      @duprie37 10 днів тому

      ​@@badbadrobotrobot959 Jennifer Rush just entered the chat...

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy 8 днів тому

      Finally, someone else remembered the bookshelves. What's the point of jumping into a black hole if you're not going to check out the back of the bookshelves?

  • @StormbringerMM
    @StormbringerMM 13 днів тому +457

    Veritasium Entered the chat.
    PBS Spacetime: “I was camping your respawn a few days ago”.

    • @ZoonCrypticon
      @ZoonCrypticon 13 днів тому +25

      Veritasium lost his credibility after the Gates connection. In veritasio veritas non iam est.

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 13 днів тому +56

      @@ZoonCrypticon wooosh how does that invalidates what he says about science?

    • @mheermance
      @mheermance 13 днів тому +7

      ​@@User-jr7vfI don't even understand what that means.

    • @rogaldorn4759
      @rogaldorn4759 13 днів тому +10

      ​@@User-jr7vf
      Agreed.
      Now. If he had been shilling for the pharma, automobile or any other industry, tightly connected to systemic and abusive tendencies, I'd say:
      It's time to raise yer pitchforks, and pass some judgement.

    • @JJean64
      @JJean64 13 днів тому +82

      ​@@ZoonCrypticon
      Bro's acting like as if Bill Gates have the ability to somehow change the laws of general relativity or something 💀

  • @ReformationRamblings
    @ReformationRamblings 13 днів тому +138

    Thanks for the video. I’m currently falling past the event horizon of a black hole and I can confirm that it really do be like this.

    • @donnyjepp
      @donnyjepp 13 днів тому +5

      You about to turn into pasta 😂

    • @TheWebsOfCorruptionNeverFail
      @TheWebsOfCorruptionNeverFail 13 днів тому +1

      Bro must have seen every Vsauce, Veratasium, John Micheal Godier, Vlog Bros, Smarter every day and PBS episode ever by now...

    • @chitlitlah
      @chitlitlah 13 днів тому +1

      My observations indicate that your approach to the event horizon has caused you to lose your grasp of the English language. Luckily, you should have crossed it by now so we won't have to hear it get worse.

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 13 днів тому +1

      I am the guy right in front of you, near the singularity

    • @aididdat1749
      @aididdat1749 13 днів тому +5

      I might be in the black hole because I can see what you wrote.

  • @stanmanlyman4550
    @stanmanlyman4550 13 днів тому +108

    Alice saw the tesseract and taught bob how to decipher all the qbits

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 13 днів тому +14

      And then she saw her daughter and started screaming her name: MUUUUUURPH!!

    • @stanmanlyman4550
      @stanmanlyman4550 13 днів тому +8

      beautiful movie though

    • @Deletirium
      @Deletirium 13 днів тому +3

      Lamest twist EVER, for an otherwise very well-made film.😖

  • @louisfriend1
    @louisfriend1 13 днів тому +13

    This is without doubt the most engrossing and informative description of both the information paradox and equivalence for the layperson I've ever watched. Thank you Dr O'Dowd, and a special thanks to Alice and Bob for their committment to science.

  • @GetterRay
    @GetterRay 13 днів тому +11

    People saying that Veritasium beat Space Time to the punch when literally everything in Derek's video had been covered by Space Time years ago.

  • @theplanetrepairman9945
    @theplanetrepairman9945 13 днів тому +24

    "What Happens If You Jump Into A Black Hole?" ....To shreds you say?

    • @inplainview1
      @inplainview1 12 днів тому +2

      This comment hasn't gotten enough love.

  • @demeurecorentin
    @demeurecorentin 11 днів тому +5

    The animations are of impressive quality for a free educational video on UA-cam, thank you PBS.

  • @JonCofer
    @JonCofer 13 днів тому +17

    I don’t really know what you’re talking about in most of this episode, but I do like the way you say it

  • @mgancarzjr
    @mgancarzjr 13 днів тому +42

    I predict that we won't be able to decrypt the messages sent between Alice and Bob.

    • @thezipcreator
      @thezipcreator 13 днів тому +4

      they're using that qubit to generate their encryption key

    • @JdeBP
      @JdeBP 13 днів тому +3

      Bob's dual computer science achievements of developing a true artificial intelligence _and_ a method of reading consciousness are somewhat underrated, too. (-:

  • @CortanaCH
    @CortanaCH 13 днів тому +19

    I just can't watch enough videos about black holes. The most fascinating thing in space.

  • @gabor6259
    @gabor6259 13 днів тому +5

    This is by far the best love story I've ever witnessed on this channel.

  • @Ana_Jantra
    @Ana_Jantra 13 днів тому +129

    Cool! Another black hole video

  • @hereticpariah6_66
    @hereticpariah6_66 13 днів тому +19

    _"Spinning, whirling_
    _Still descending.._
    _Like a spiral sea_
    *_UNENDING!!!"_*
    ..
    Rush, _Cygnus X-1_

    • @brothermine2292
      @brothermine2292 13 днів тому

      "Twirling, twirling, twirling into the future." -- Citizen Kang (Or was it Kodos?)

    • @nessiecz2006
      @nessiecz2006 9 днів тому

      I'm confused but I like it

  • @kwokhardy2512
    @kwokhardy2512 13 днів тому +60

    - Being up at 4am for no reason
    - Sees new spacetime video notification

  • @mattwilcox8134
    @mattwilcox8134 13 днів тому +3

    As another merch idea, that black hole pin design would make an awesome phone case.

  • @PaintballVideosNet
    @PaintballVideosNet 13 днів тому +8

    Me: I'm smart!
    *Watches video*
    Me: I'm dumb!

  • @bentationfunkiloglio
    @bentationfunkiloglio 13 днів тому +6

    This video demonstrates why PBS Space Time is the best science podcast in the known multiverse!
    Super clear presentation and analysis that makes the most difficult concepts accessible to even us non-Phd mortals!

    • @koponstanley4
      @koponstanley4 13 днів тому

      Big ask,
      Could you ask for me about the background music playlist?

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy 8 днів тому

      Hey, would you please ask if they could change the name of black holes to dark meatballs? Speghettification and dark meatballs just go together.

  • @MrLeafeater
    @MrLeafeater 13 днів тому +7

    I'm gonna compress all the videos I've watched, that explain this "experience", into a single video from which none of the constituent videos can escape or be decoded. I love black holes. (This is the most thorough of them all; I even learned a few things.)

  • @simoncoweII
    @simoncoweII 13 днів тому +11

    Jumping into a black hole is the secret recipe to making the best spaghetti in the universe.

    • @evangonzalez2245
      @evangonzalez2245 13 днів тому +1

      Nuclear pasta always comes out a bit dense 😉

  • @jamesdouglas5055
    @jamesdouglas5055 13 днів тому +7

    I propose after the geDunkin experiment is finished we all go out for geDonuts.
    If we had completed a gedanken experiment instead we would all go out for fries because die gedanken sind frei.

    • @badroad1000
      @badroad1000 День тому

      If we eat all that we'll end up with a huge gedankedank.

  • @MrChipMC
    @MrChipMC 13 днів тому +5

    Please make a episode about colliding blackholes and time dilation!
    You are saying object is like "freasing" at the event horizon. So will we see how those blackholes approach each other and eventually collide or not?
    Please explain! 🙏

    • @Zeeraha
      @Zeeraha 8 днів тому

      Merger of two black holes has already been registered by LIGO. The black holes would collide in a way, that when close enough to each other, a new event horizon would appear because their masses are combined into the even stronger gravitational field. What is on the edge of event horizon is, by my view, frozen in time. What happens below it is another mystery. Example, towards the center of bodies, the gravity weakens, but the pressures are immense, thus time may pass within the black hole.

    • @MrChipMC
      @MrChipMC 8 днів тому +1

      @Zeeraha exactly! I want to see the video like they did before about the monkey and observer near the blackhole , but this time about two blackholes

  • @Moon_Metty
    @Moon_Metty 13 днів тому +7

    Alright, we know about Alice and Bob.
    But this still doesn't answer the most important question of all:
    Where is Waldo?

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy 8 днів тому +1

      No way, you're not dragging me into this. I spent way too much time searching.

  • @willo7734
    @willo7734 13 днів тому +2

    I’ve watched most of the PBS spacetime episodes over the years and I can say this is my favorite one. Well done PBS spacetime!

  • @cherryspades3440
    @cherryspades3440 13 днів тому +2

    LOVING the editing and overall production on the newest episodes

  • @jonathanl8538
    @jonathanl8538 13 днів тому +6

    3:55 Thank you! For years I've wondered how to reconcile time freezing at the event horizon with actually crossing the horizon. How could anything cross if time slows down and ultimately "stops"? Wouldn't Alice see the whole future history of the Universe flash by, including seeing the black hole evaporate before she actually falls into it?
    But I think this video's explanation did a good job putting these concerns to rest :)

  • @kobayashimaru8114
    @kobayashimaru8114 13 днів тому +3

    I really appreciate all of the clever visuals

  • @TooTRUEtoBeG00D
    @TooTRUEtoBeG00D 13 днів тому +4

    I just watched new Veritasium video about black/white holes.
    What a time to be alive.

    • @AricBlunk
      @AricBlunk 13 днів тому +1

      I just saw your comment and saw the video last night and agree with you.

    • @mkk3a
      @mkk3a 13 днів тому +1

      A "Two Minute Papers" easter egg?

    • @TooTRUEtoBeG00D
      @TooTRUEtoBeG00D 13 днів тому

      @@mkk3a It seemed appropriate. Shout out to Karol.

    • @TooTRUEtoBeG00D
      @TooTRUEtoBeG00D 13 днів тому +1

      @@AricBlunk LETS GOOOOOOOOOO!

  • @Vastin
    @Vastin 13 днів тому

    I do love these sorts of thought experiments and your presentation on this one was a lot of fun to follow.

  • @kyleespinoza7201
    @kyleespinoza7201 13 днів тому +5

    My intuition tells me that the quantum bit (and Alice, for that matter) isn't duplicated or deleted, but it being in the blackhole and emitted in Hawking radiation are different moments in time. I'm sure it's a gross oversimplification and me not fully understanding the math and physics, but i can't shake the feeling either.
    Guess I'm waiting like Bob lol
    Now that i think about it some time later, i wonder what digitized Alice would remember once Bob is done reassembling her. What was her subjective experience of it all? Would she remember falling past the event horizon? I wonder why or why not...

  • @linecraftman3907
    @linecraftman3907 13 днів тому +3

    I was worried about Bob until the very end, glad it worked out in the end

  • @RedDuke42
    @RedDuke42 13 днів тому +2

    Fantastic video once more. This channel perfectly fills the niche between more layman-oriented science shows like Veritasium, and full-blown physics lectures. ❤

  • @boringturtle
    @boringturtle 13 днів тому +2

    For what it's worth, Alice and Bob are also the heroes of every computer security diagram. Their adventures are not limited to the textbooks of physics, computer science uses them too.

    • @garethdean6382
      @garethdean6382 13 днів тому

      Where they do battle with their nemesis, Carol.

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 13 днів тому

      @@garethdean6382as well as Evelyn and Malaroy

  • @567secret
    @567secret 13 днів тому +5

    Why can't Alice's perspective of falling into the singularity be equivalent to Bob's perspective of the hawking radiation emitted? Ie. the singularity is a projection of the inevitable future of the evaporation of the black hole by Alice's perspective? As I understand it this would make sense with what the spacetime diagram interior to the blackhole tells us?

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 13 днів тому +1

      Alice contains a lot more energy than that radiated as Hawking radiation which is why he has to wait a long time (10^100 years or so) for all of her information to come back out.

  • @victorpilgrim
    @victorpilgrim 13 днів тому +5

    i think Alice never got pass the event horizon, falling down she starts to experience such a huge time dilation, that on her time scale the black hole starts to evaporate. I also think because of a such curved space the black hole (or is it the stuff that fell in? i feel like there's no difference, black hole is the stuff that fell into it) will start to glow. in that case black holes are frozen in time (for the outside observers) collapse, and that huge collapse is hidden by Einstein's squeezing of space to very thin slice of what we perceive as the event horizon. The crossable event horizon doesn't exist, instead it's a place where collapse of the black hole is happening, while the singularity is the moment in time to there they fall/when the black hole evaporates. This is the intuition i got from watching these wonderful videos for years

    • @Xanaden
      @Xanaden 6 днів тому

      I thought the same thing. If it takes infinite time to reach the event horizon, then dark energy (expansion of universe) should make the distance to the event horizon infinite as well. and hawking radiation would cause the blackhole to vaporize before you pass the event horizon for the same reason.

    • @JCDAMV
      @JCDAMV 4 дні тому

      This is only true when using Schwarzschild coordinates. Schwarzschild coordinates are very convenient for describing weak gravity fields, but they fail to describe a black hole event horizon.
      There are alternative coordinate systems en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwarzschild_metric#Alternative_coordinates you can use to describe an event horizon without time becoming zero/infinite.
      I think that is going to be explained in future videos!

  • @BytebroUK
    @BytebroUK 13 днів тому

    I just want to say that although the channel is a joy anyway, I completely love these deep dive sequences. Good work, people.

  • @Kronzik
    @Kronzik 13 днів тому

    Starting to see the vision for this arc of content, excited to see it all come together.

  • @SayAhh
    @SayAhh 13 днів тому +13

    Cool! Another black hole video!

  • @TripleOmega
    @TripleOmega 13 днів тому +3

    My first thought here was: Wouldn't Alice witness the end of the universe due to time dilation before crossing the event horizon?

  • @tomorowsnobodys
    @tomorowsnobodys 13 днів тому

    I’ve ordered the black hole pin from your store! I happened to be shopping for pins today and wouldn’t you know it, one of my favorite channels uploaded an excellent new video and they happen to have a new pin depicting one of my favorite objects! How serendipitous for us both!

  • @d4mdcykey
    @d4mdcykey 7 днів тому

    This was a brilliant presentation and quite thorough, very impressive job.

  • @Gandalf-The-Green
    @Gandalf-The-Green 13 днів тому +4

    Six stars of the Northern Cross
    In mourning for their sister's loss
    In a final flash of glory
    Nevermore to grace the night
    - Rush

  • @Vastin
    @Vastin 13 днів тому +23

    There is a reasonably straightforward resolution to this paradox, but it requires that we treat the horizon as a true horizon, not a coordinate horizon - and this seems logical if we consider the effect of length contraction on Alice's perspective of her own fall. She is after all, *approaching the speed of light* as she approaches the horizon, and her perspective of the black hole (if she could see through it) is that its depth is very rapidly diminishing, and as she gets even closer its width should likewise begin to contract rapidly until the entire horizon becomes a POINT OBJECT towards which she is falling.
    By the time she 'reaches' the horizon, the diameter of the entire event horizon should only be a single Plank Length - the outer horizon has now *become* a singularity from Alice's perspective. All black holes have the same diameter of one Plank Length, regardless of their mass, though from a more distant perspective their Area and apparent diameter reflects their mass. Their density does NOT drop as they grow - they achieve Plank Density as the Beckenstein Bound is saturated, and their Area expands in lockstep with their mass to maintain Plank Density no matter how large or small they are. Whether a black hole is one angstrom wide, or a LY across, it has the same density, because it is now effectively a 2D sphere and its 'density' as a 2D object does not change as you add mass.
    Unfortunately the implication this has for the tidal forces of the black hole are somewhat dire for Alice. She will be spaghettified because she is not approaching a black hole with a diameter of billions of km - she's approaching a black hole with a diameter of one plank length. She will then be pancaked as well, but she will NOT fall through a causal barrier where Bob can no longer observe her at all because she perceives no horizon at all, nor any space to fall 'into'. Alas Bob will receive very little information about her due to the time dilation she's experiencing in this 2-dimensional pseudo-singularity, which presumably will evaporate gradually via thermodynamic processes similar to how hawking radiation is currently described. He'll still have to go through the process of recording the Black Hole's entire evaporation process and reconstruct Alice's data, because she's been scrambled about as thoroughly as anything CAN be scrambled - reflecting the maximal entropy of the black hole.
    Some interpretation similar to this is necessary to prevent violation of the Beckenstein Bound and prevent the formation of a true physical singularity of infinite density. In this case the surface of the black hole consists of a plank density shell of mass, with each element of it probabilistically 'smeared' across the entire horizon, as from the perspective of each particle they are in fact falling towards a singularity - though more accurately, they will see that singularity explode in their faces as they fall due to the fact that their perspective of the approach to the horizon now extends into the unimaginably distant future all the way to the point where they are re-emitted in very little pieces, their 'fall' concludes with them being blasted out into space and the infalling observer's experience would be far more akin to taking a nose-dive into a supernova than falling into a placid void.
    Why do I think this is the case? I mean, quite frankly it's because I don't believe that beckenstein bound violation is acceptable, nor are physical infinities, and EVERY model of a black hole interior I've ever seen postulated clearly violates the Beckenstein Bound and describes a physical infinity - while this model prevents that. That's the entire reason. Make of it what you will.

    • @axle.student
      @axle.student 13 днів тому +1

      Thank you. I am not a physicist but did follow most of what you said accept for a couple of labels. I currently have a deep fascination with the intersect of singularities and event horizons. Looking at the common Minkowski spacetime geometry with fore and aft light cones we have an intersect of the 3D event horizons at a singularity in the "Now" time event horizon. That illustration of the 2D plane that intersect the diagram appears to hold all of the infinite number of intersects in the 3D universe "across: that "Now moment. No singularity on that plane can be aware of any other singularity until some time later when the light cones of each singularity cross. Alternatively some of those singularities may be close enough to be touching in the time event horizon of "Now" and have a direct awareness of the other singularity .
      So I am left with this mix of both local and non local singularities in every plank length in time. In some sense for me the entire universe feels like a kind of progression of infinite singularities in each "now" moment.
      >
      My focus is on this singularity intersect of all event horizons in each moment.
      >
      Sorry if I didn't explain my view well. It's complex in my mind and difficult to put into words in a short statement :)

    • @allanhernandez6692
      @allanhernandez6692 13 днів тому +7

      This makes much more sense to me. I have always been frustrated by the black hole explanations which posit a crossing of the event horizon which makes no real sense given that black holes are not immortal, and even if the rest of the universe has an infinite amount of time to watch, the person falling will never cross.
      Given that black holes evaporate, and the universe sees the black hole evaporate before the faller ever crossed the horizon, it can only make sense that the person falling must experience the corresponding rate increase of hawking radiation (from their perspective) as they approach the horizon until they themselves are emitted as hawking radiation.

    • @axle.student
      @axle.student 13 днів тому +1

      @@allanhernandez6692 I am sitting here (again) struggling with the idea of red shift at the event horizon and light traveling away at 'c' from just above the event horizon. There is this frame of reference issue that keeps coming up for a photon suddenly shifting from a velocity of 'c' outward to zero velocity and then to a velocity of 'c' inward beyond the event horizon. I know different geometry explains this away by moving the direction of the photon sideways in time, but that zero velocity moment still weirds me out lol
      >
      [edit] The photon travels at 'c' in space and at 'c' in time and exist along the event horizon of the light cone already. I have to ask where we find the extra velocity or loose the velocity if 'c' is constant.. We can explain it a way with warped space, but then physics says space doesn't actually exist to warp in the first place. It's contradiction that I can't get past no matter what way physics explains it :(

    • @Vastin
      @Vastin 13 днів тому +5

      @@axle.student There are a number of issues with the standard explanations of the event horizon. The problem seems to arise from an incomplete formulation of GR that postulates a crossable horizon in the first place - accepting that premise inevitably creates a host of paradoxical behaviors and contradictions. Because that's what our best math describes, that's the description most physicists accept for the time being - but looking at it in terms of logic and the fact that all our OTHER physics and math are violated once you take that step, it just seems like the least likely solution.
      It really seems like in order to understand gravity and relativity better, they should be looking for ways to close off the horizon like this that maintain the logical consistency of the rest of physics, rather than playing with mathematical artefacts 'beyond' the horizon. While I see the appeal of that as a theoretician, it eventually loses its shine after the 'nth' iteration or so which fails to resolve any of these paradoxes.

    • @axle.student
      @axle.student 13 днів тому +1

      @@Vastin Thank you. I appreciate your comments. Again not a physicist but well studied (non indentured) across a number of disciplines. It is the singularity and event horizon problem that has bugged me for as long as I can remember. I thew all the std constraints of physics out the window a few months back to jail break my mind and run some thought experiments. I focused upon the issues around the singularity and event horizon issues and gained myself some better insight by thinking outside of the box. I have nailed down some interesting perspectives around the 4D space-time geometry. I can see an entire working 4D universe abstractly in my head accept for the non locality link. Even gravity appears to become nothing more than an emergent expression or illusion of quantum and GR.
      >
      Lot of work to translate that from my head into words and graphics ahead. I have seen/encountered a number of physicists that appear to have been or are down a similar rabbit hole so I will look toward there work for some guidance. Maybe they have already tested it and no point my looking any deeper :)

  • @GeneticFreak
    @GeneticFreak 12 днів тому

    This video came out just days after Derek's video and such perfect timing! A whole week of black hole pondering!

  • @deepdrag8131
    @deepdrag8131 13 днів тому +2

    Thanks for this. I’m planning to jump into a black hole for my birthday and I’m wondering what to expect.

  • @buttonsjr
    @buttonsjr 13 днів тому +4

    Now do one about what an infinite universe with infinite mass and infinite energy would look like. PBS infinite series mentioned it in one of their last videos. The Mandelbrot set or another fractal pattern seems like it would immerge is such a situation due to infinite mass and energy requiring infinite black holes. I think the we could be inside of a black hole that is a part of a russian nesting dolls of black holes that is also part of a fractal of black holes and parallel universes and black holes could be the pathway to other universes.
    It certainly makes more sense that "dark energy"

  • @cesaraugusto6083
    @cesaraugusto6083 13 днів тому +3

    Great video as always. But there's something that I've been wondering for a while and still haven't been able to find an answer.
    Time dilation gets more and more extreme the closer you get to the event horizon as you mentioned, so in this case if Alice were to "hang around" close to the EH for a minute in her own relative time and then managed to get back to Bob far from it a way longer time would have elapsed for him and the "universe outside". That I understand.
    But the problem is about her perspective as she goes through the event horizon. Wouldn't time dilation tend to infinite as she gets closer and closer?
    If so, as soon as she were to cross it, her relative time dilation would be so extreme that any amount time she experienced inside the EH would be equivalent to a tremendous amount of time "outside"(maybe infinite?). And if so any time she spent there would mean that enough time outside had passed that the black hole would've evaporated, so she wouldn't ever be able to actually experience what it's like to be inside one, as all the space inside would get instantly smaller and she'd be crushed against the singularity before just "popping out of existence".
    This has been leading to so many sleepless nights for me 😅. Please tell me what I've been doing wrong or missing. Thanks!

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 13 днів тому +3

      Time dilation is not just a function of position, it depends a lot on how you move. If you stay put, hover, then yes, time dilation near the horizon is very strong, and exactly at the horizon it's infinite, your clocks don't tick at all. But for that you need to stay put there, which is impossible for massive bodies. Very similar to moving at light speed - if you could go at speed of light, your clocks also wouldn't tick, infinite time dilation. But massive bodies can't do that. Event horizon is a "null hypersurface" - just like a light cone, staying there is equivalent to moving at light speed, crossing it outwards is equivalent to moving faster than light.
      For a falling Alice things look differently, and her clocks keep ticking. She doesn't even see the outer universe sped up, unlike the staying put scenario. See how "proper time" is defined using the metric tensor, it's all about vectors in 4D spacetime, how you move there.

  • @jo_crespo11235
    @jo_crespo11235 13 днів тому

    Excellent video Matt, keep the hard work.

  • @grasshopper-ln9us
    @grasshopper-ln9us 12 днів тому

    This was the 1st UA-cam channel I subscribed to and it's still going strong

  • @claudiaarjangi4914
    @claudiaarjangi4914 13 днів тому +6

    How freaky-cool is it , that the event horizon is a "border" between now & the literal Far far far future.
    😁🌏☮️

  • @WeRemainFaceless
    @WeRemainFaceless 13 днів тому +15

    Love that you’re covering this topic. For most of my adult life I’ve pondered what would happen if you we’re to dive into a black hole (and survive the tidal forces/radiation etc).
    I came to the conclusion that, theoretically, you’d never reach the “singularity”. By the time you reached the point in space that could be considered a singularity, the black hole would have dissipated and you’d find yourself back in normal space, albeit a few thousand billion years in the future.

    • @breezyx976
      @breezyx976 13 днів тому +4

      Hence why the singularity itself cannot exist. Nice catch!

    • @anywallsocket
      @anywallsocket 13 днів тому +1

      “A few thousand billion years” lmao ok

    • @juliavixen176
      @juliavixen176 13 днів тому +5

      Using Gullstrand-Painlevé Coordinates (following the proper time of an observer in free-fall) you *will* actually reach the physical singularity at the black hole's center of mass in a finite amount of time. Pretty quickly too, from your point of view. (From seconds to days depending on the size of the black hole.)

    • @Andromedon777
      @Andromedon777 13 днів тому +2

      ​@@juliavixen176but would the universe behind you age much faster to the point of seeing its "death", including that of the BH?

    • @david21686
      @david21686 13 днів тому

      @@juliavixen176 What does that coordinate system say about how long it would take to reach the singularity in the reference frame of a distant observer? Would it be longer than the time it takes for the black hole to evaporate?

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_ 13 днів тому +2

    I can't wait for next week!

  • @Acid_Viking
    @Acid_Viking 12 днів тому +1

    Thank you for talking me out of jumping into a black hole.

  • @davidf5609
    @davidf5609 13 днів тому +3

    This episode smells of Leonard Susskind.

  • @Quzga
    @Quzga 13 днів тому +6

    MUUUURPH

  • @kevinmarshall3198
    @kevinmarshall3198 4 дні тому +1

    No matter how much research I do on black holes, it's still difficult to understand this anomaly. The scale of it is difficult to comprehend. Its truly a real life object that seems like science fiction.

  • @abhisheksingh1143
    @abhisheksingh1143 13 днів тому +1

    Fantastic video. Thank you. Congrats!

  • @doggedout
    @doggedout 13 днів тому +4

    "....Bob can do this, because he has nothing but time on his hands."
    Bob should have thought of that before he dropped Alice into an infinitely endless expanse of black nothing with a singularity at its center.

  • @KoZeroSM
    @KoZeroSM 13 днів тому +3

    0:11 It's "Gedanken," not deganken or whatever that was

  • @jamesleatherwood5125
    @jamesleatherwood5125 13 днів тому

    Didnt realize the thought experiment about falling into black holes had so many variations and variables based on perspective. My mind engine bes starting up and my thoughts be rumblin to life! Love it when videos do that! :)

  • @Veldrade
    @Veldrade 9 днів тому +1

    There are a few things I don't understand :
    -If time accelerates to basically infinity when you get close to the event horizon, then shouldn't the black hole have evaporated entirely before you reach its horizon ?
    -If photons from the event horizon appear to have more and more energy as Alice accelerates towards the black hole, shouldn't she be disintegrated before reaching it ?
    -Why can light inside the black hole go towards its outside (like the light from the cube going towards Alice's eyes when both have crossed the horizon) ? Shouldn't things only be able to move towards the center of the black hole ? It feels contradictory because if things can't get out of the event horizon, then it should be even worse when you get closer to the center, right ?

  • @indinaut
    @indinaut 13 днів тому +4

    it's spaghetti time!

    • @evgenijdenisov
      @evgenijdenisov 13 днів тому +3

      Or pancakes.

    • @peteshively5552
      @peteshively5552 13 днів тому

      I like pancakes

    • @Soupy_loopy
      @Soupy_loopy 8 днів тому

      It's peanut butter jelly time peanut butter jelly time peanut butter peanut butter peanut butter and a baseball bat!

  • @binbots
    @binbots 13 днів тому +19

    General relativity and quantum mechanics will never be combined until we realize that each individual observer is observing them both at different moments in time. Because causality has a speed limit (c) every point in space where one observes it from will be the closest to the present moment. When one looks out into the universe they see the past which is made of particles (GR). When one tries to look at smaller and smaller sizes and distances, they are actually looking closer and closer to the present moment (QM). The wave property of particles appears when we start trying to predict the future of that particle. It is a probability wave because the future is probabilistic. Wave function collapse is what we perceive as the present moment and is what divides the past from the future. GR is making measurements in the observed past and therefore, predictable. It can predict the future but only from information collected from the past. QM is attempting to make measurements of the unobserved future and therefore, unpredictable. Only once a particle interacts with the present moment does it become predictable. This is an observational interpretation of the mathematics we currently use based on the limited perspective we have with the experiments we choose to observe the universe with.

    • @andreaswiescher7196
      @andreaswiescher7196 13 днів тому +6

      That's an interesting point of view

    • @andreaswiescher7196
      @andreaswiescher7196 13 днів тому +3

      Can we get that covered in the next episode please?

    • @ab8jeh
      @ab8jeh 13 днів тому +3

      Isn't that the premise of loop quantum gravity?

    • @Corvaire
      @Corvaire 13 днів тому +1

      Please don't disturb the delicate balance of book sales. ;O)-

    • @timhaldane7588
      @timhaldane7588 13 днів тому +2

      How do you reconcile this with experiments (and the entire field of quantum computation) that depend on keeping a system in superposition? What would it even mean for a system to be in superposition? Also, how would such a metaphysical explanation help to resolve mathematical infinities when attempting to combine the physics of GR and QM?

  • @boneladders
    @boneladders 13 днів тому

    these black hole related episodes are my absolute favorite! 🖤

  • @machevellian79
    @machevellian79 13 днів тому

    Great episode, feels like I am waiting near the event horizon for next week an eternity from my perspective.

  • @evilleagueofevil9049
    @evilleagueofevil9049 13 днів тому +3

    I'm confused. It seems to me like there is a simpler contradiction driving this weirdness, present without anything quantum (except Hawking radiation):
    In Bob's frame of reference, Alice takes infinite time to cross the event horizon.
    Also in Bob's frame, the black hole Hawking evaporates in finite time.
    So, Alice never crosses the horizon in Bob's frame.
    If we then ASSUME Alice crossed in her own frame, then of course the frames contradict.
    I can't do the necessary math, but intuitively, Alice should never be able to cross, even in her own frame of reference. Time dilation would make it so the horizon shrinks away from her (via Hawking evaporation) before she reaches it.
    The outro (15:28) says Alice not crossing would break the equivalence principle, so my question is, how?
    (Is this the "firewall at the horizon?")

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 13 днів тому +1

      In Bob's frame Alice's photons that he receives do not take infinite time, since of course there are a finite number of photons emitted and Bob is of course at a finite distance. However, in Bob's frame Alice still passes the event horizon and actually increases the area of the event horizon and the radius of the black hole, which he can then measure a very short time later.

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 13 днів тому

      @@tonywells6990Must there be finitely many photons emitted? If they have smaller and smaller amounts of energy, couldn’t there be infinitely many?

    • @tonywells6990
      @tonywells6990 13 днів тому

      @@drdca8263 No, the photons don't multiply in number. They are redshifted.

    • @drdca8263
      @drdca8263 13 днів тому

      @@tonywells6990 Ah wait, we are only considering the periodic emissions of the gamma ones, and there is only a finite amount of Alice’s time that Bob sees (before she crosses horizon from her perspective) and it only flashes finitely many times,
      Ok, I retract my previous point then.
      (I was thinking about maybe possibly infinitely many infrared photons emitted from thermal radiation)

  • @ChobThomas
    @ChobThomas 11 днів тому +3

    You die, saved you 20 minutes

  • @user-or5ke5yn4w
    @user-or5ke5yn4w 13 днів тому +2

    Now I think I'm starting to get it. When they tell that singularity is not a point in space but a moment in time - it means that you never reach the 'central point' of the black hole because time speeds up so fast that before you fall there, the black hole already evaporates. Hmmm... In some sense the center of a black hole doesn't exist then, as nothing ever reaches it.
    Or even stricter idea - you can't actually pass through the horizon, because it starts shrinking right under your nose because of very fast time and Hawking radiation until it's just gone, and you find yourself at that same place without a black hole after it has evaporated, some 10^80 years later or so.

    • @thedeemon
      @thedeemon 13 днів тому

      nope, the idea of singularity acting like a moment in time comes from analyzing a static solution where black hole does not evaporate and doesn't grow either. It's just about coordinates and spacetime geometry. See recent Veritasium video for more info and animated charts.

  • @The_Silver_Lurker
    @The_Silver_Lurker 13 днів тому

    Good follow-up to the episode of Star Talk from a couple weeks ago!

  • @bigjermboktown6976
    @bigjermboktown6976 13 днів тому +2

    Am I first?!

  • @ptiwari2392
    @ptiwari2392 12 днів тому +1

    Wow, Matt ending on a cliffhanger for once, what a pleasant surprise. Super cool episode, this is exactly the kind of stuff I wonder about sometimes (on a way lower level than this obviously). Something about the event horizon is so final, it would be a miracle if physics could find a way to peer past it. Maybe in a couple hundred years! or a couple thousand...

  • @jacksawyer3626
    @jacksawyer3626 13 днів тому

    Outstanding Dr. Matt.

  • @hcesarcastro
    @hcesarcastro 13 днів тому +1

    From Bob's persepective, which would have happened first: Alice crossing the event horizon or the black hole evaporating?

  • @VisMajorr
    @VisMajorr 13 днів тому

    Matt thankyou so much! I have been dying for this series for years now! You are spot on! Cant wait for Bob and Alice to have a couple of blackhole mass sized piles of bell pairs 😉 I am AMPS…I mean AMPED for the next one!

  • @danillorippel
    @danillorippel 13 днів тому +1

    This video is amazing!❤

  • @ingloriousbaxter
    @ingloriousbaxter 10 днів тому

    I would love for PBS Space Time to do an episode dedicated to Outer Wilds. A game full of macroscopic quantum mechanics, a planet’s core black hole, and a nomadic science-loving species.

  • @vladus..
    @vladus.. 13 днів тому

    Nice explanation 💪🏻

  • @ulti-mantis
    @ulti-mantis 13 днів тому

    6:57 Top notch animations (and I mean this both sarcastically AND sincerely)

  • @floatocean7059
    @floatocean7059 10 днів тому

    I did it!!!!! I worked out how to map Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle onto the atom. We can consider the electron as a vector, it has a magnitude and direction, the exact same properties used to measure momentum. The electron can move in any direction all around the centre, and it has a magnitude, an excited electron will be found further away from the centre, and a more stable one will be closer to the centre. So we can see there should be perfect mathematical symmetry between the electron and momentum. In fact, it could be helpful to think of the electron as the force carrier particle for momentum. In the current model, the electrons appear to be stuck on ridges, discrete intervals of distance away from the atomic nuclei, today physicists call these levels of excitement. In my model, the wave function exists as a real physical entity exerting an actual force. electrons form due to the wave function reaching its maximum or minimum value which coincidentally happens at these discrete distances, causing a perturbation in spacetime, these are called virtual particles, and we have seen other examples of virtual particles that act strangely like electrons, popping in and out of existence. the electron is the force carrier particle for the wave function. Which means the wave function is the fifth fundamental force, which means it has a field, which is somewhat intuitive because no matter the size of the object, it always has some amount of wobble as it moves. All objects have to follow a wave function, including you and I when we walk.
    Location has mathematical congruence with the nucleus. It has a constant wobble, thus keeping the absolute location an unknown. Momentum, then, has translation symmetry with the electron, with the electron particles following along the wave function. Since Heisenberg's uncertainty principle states if we know location, we cannot know the momentum, and vice versa.
    We can map the electron perfectly onto the wave function, without fully knowing either one. Since these have absolute mathematical congruence, the electron is pulling the nucleus in some sort of Heisenberg's tug-of-war, so we'll say. However, we need to first map Schrodinger's equation onto a sphere, using 3D trigonometry and differential equations.
    We've established that the electron is the force carrier particle for the wave function, or wave force. In the new model, each atom has exactly two electrons, or an electron pair, which create equal amplitudes in opposing directions, thus resulting in the wave function as described in Schrodinger's equations. This is another amazing coincidence, as all atoms have even numbers of electrons. When, in reality, they have exactly 2 opposing electrons that follow the wave function, reforming continuously at the highs and lows of the wave function. The momentum of the electron makes the nucleus lag behind, giving the increased distances seen for excited particles, and why we see discrete levels, or ridges. The drawing of the atom will change, it will now look something more like a horse and carriage, with the nucleus being pulled by the two electrons. The faster the horse (the electron), the longer the rope that tethers the nucleus to them. This is also a convenient coincidence, that momentum itself would lead to higher excitement levels for the force carrier particle of momentum (defined by the wave function).
    Prediction 1: We will have a formula which can precisely tell us when and where an electron will form by wrapping Schrodinger's equation around the equator of the atom.
    Prediction 2: The wave function is the fifth fundamental force, it has an associated field, and the electron is the force carrier particle for it.
    Prediction 3: We can catch an electron. Increasing its pressure using magnets or light will increase its wobble, which will give us unlimited green energy. Squeezing a single electron can result in a flood of baryons, exotic particles, and complex particles.
    Prediction 4: The electron itself is the force carrier particle for the wave function. So, if we get enough electrons and energise them to all face the same direction, we can travel at relativistic speeds, or possibly faster than light. In fact, the double slit experiment shows the wave function itself is FTL.
    Prediction 5: that wherever a wave function exists, the weak nuclear force will be exerting effort on the particle in question, since we can see the electron being exchanged between quarks. I can show, that the wave function FORCE is what is actually keeping the quarks at the exact distances. This means there is no weak nuclear force, but instead baryon decay occurs by the 'weak nuclear potential energy', the same energy we'll be farming from the electron pressure chambers. This means we have something to test, and since it is testable, we have already fulfilled one the requirements of proof of concept. Data analyses on the perturbations in other particles, such as the photon, caused by a 3D Schrodinger's equation could indicate whether we have stumbled upon a monumental jackpot and wealth of understanding in physics.
    If someone maps the Schrodinger equation onto a 3D plane along the equator (this allows for directionally opposing electrons), then maps the already known 'excitement levels' from the older model onto the maximums and minimums of the wave function from my new model, then this is will become proof of a working concept. I'm leaving this comment here, knowing full well, when that happens, I will have hard evidence to point to, showing I am the first to solve for the atom using the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. award me the appropriate accolades as you must, Nobel prize notwithstanding.
    Duncan McKay . DOB 24/12/1987

  • @Kohl293
    @Kohl293 12 днів тому

    Off all the answers, the firewall is my favorite. Can’t wait to see how it breaks everything!

  • @JdeBP
    @JdeBP 13 днів тому +1

    One of the things that ScienceClic included in its falling into a black hole videos from 2021 that this does not is the effect of the aberration of light upon what Alice sees. The effect is incidental to the main thesis of this video, but it is glossing over the details that gets people confused; and people will remember the What Alice Sees part even if it is not the main point.

  • @epicmatter4555
    @epicmatter4555 12 днів тому +1

    Regarding the last question about unitarity: My guess is, that unitarity is probably not broken, because the qubit never reaches the singularity. Because of the exponentially increasing time dilation they would travel through time at most until the end of the black holes life, never reaching the point of singularity completely. That would mean antiparticles falling into the black hole via hawking radiation would eventually catch up in the inner horizon with the matter falling in and annihilate each other. Assuming the inner horizon exists and it actually does allow particles to choose a path other than directly into the point (or ring) of singularity, like the Kerr black holes suggests. But that does not explain how the energy created by this, can leave the black hole. But who knows what particles are created when matter and antimatter are colliding at those speeds and what properties they have 😂
    Please only take this as speculation and nothing more ^^ Either way Im glad these videos are always so interesting and are leaving room to speculate on how it all works. Keep up the great videos!

  • @user-hq9wl8xo2t
    @user-hq9wl8xo2t 8 днів тому +1

    Thank you for the great material - it kept me busy for a few days :) In my opinion, there is no paradox if we assume that Alice never crossed the event horizon. The paradox arises from extending the equivalence principle to areas we should never reach. It's like in Einstein's thought experiment, pondering too long whether we are falling in an elevator or floating in zero gravity - reaching the Earth's surface will solve the puzzle. Alice will perish in a fraction of a second, just before reaching the event horizon. In a sense, she will collide with matter suspended in 'timelessness' that forms the history of the BH, constantly falling but never reaching the event horizon. This will only happen if Bob starts the colossal task of shielding Sagittarius A* with a screen cooled almost to 0 K, shielding background radiation and other radiation sources quickly enough. He knows that if he doesn't do this quickly enough, from Alice's perspective approaching the EH will cause the flow of time of the universe she leaves by falling into the BH to accelerate beyond imagination - thus her back will absorb massive amounts of background radiation photons, which falling in the BH's gravitational potential will increase in intensity and energy as they approach the EH.
    I imagine that the EH is a mathematical construct where spacetime reaches the speed of light. Beyond this space, we lose the ability to interact. From the perspective of a distant observer, how can anything cross the boundary if time stops? In my view, as long as the falling object can somehow interact with the universe, it 'must wait' until the end of such a relationship before making the move to cross the event horizon - as if the universe with its possible influence on Alice's fate must first be resolved before she could cross the EH. I wonder if in some sense, falling spacetime near the EH does not stretch and millimeter-sized areas in one reference frame cannot be light-years deep, creating a volume for the matter above the EH to solidify - a true hologram. However, the most important thing that would influence the matter would be the gradient of time flow - I imagine that it could generate effects similar to pressure (similar to countless photons on Alice's back), but it is difficult to imagine being in a place where a second passes near the legs while years pass near the head. At the same time, I would like to see if someone has calculated and what the calculations of quantum effects look like for two areas with such different time flows, or if quantum tunneling could not explain the effect of black hole evaporation? Only what I just described is the opposite of the thesis that black holes have no hair... :|
    The above solution seems not to generate paradoxes, a problem arises elsewhere: we know that BHs can form in finite time, grow, and merge with each other. While the above scenario prevented crossing the EH. Wouldn't it be an elegant solution to assume that only spacetime can overcome the speed of light limits, thus wrapping falling objects near the EH? Additional mass of a box with an electron and Alice at some point in finite time will increase the EH, creating a disturbance spreading at the surface, pushing out the EH surface with submerged matter above it. Similar phenomenon to the surface tension of liquids. Unless, the BH evaporates with Alice before they merge with the EH. I would like to be able to calculate this. :) The disturbance of the event horizon as a result of merging BHs should also emit Hawking radiation - after all, spacetime curvature is its source - it would be nice if we someday had detectors near merging BHs :)
    It seems that the above description does not generate paradoxes - yet I have devised a thought experiment that still disturbs my well-being: above, I assumed that it is not possible to cross the EH in finite time - it only submerges the matter that would have fallen onto it. However, couldn't we create a black hole in a way that does not require crossing the EH? For example, placing Alice inside a large empty space. Then surround her with an amount of water that would fill the entire solar system. Do this in such a way that the water circulates on certain orbits, preventing too rapid a gravitational collapse and gentle experimental conditions. In such a situation, can we describe the process of BH formation from the center of mass (future singularity;) ) and the immediate cessation of future BH matter on itself, or do the equations indicate that the EH will form outside, cutting off its influence on the universe? Piotr Pyrka :)

    • @user-hq9wl8xo2t
      @user-hq9wl8xo2t 8 днів тому

      The source of gravitational time dilation is the gravitational potential, so the formation of EH should start from the center of mass... so that it is possible that EH is simply the end of our universes, which nothing can reach in finite time...🤔

  • @eagleoftheearth
    @eagleoftheearth 13 днів тому

    Damn! What a cliffhanger😧 can't wait for the next episode 👏

  • @sojourn6207
    @sojourn6207 10 днів тому +1

    I have two questions:
    1. Why does Alice's body not fall apart the moment she crosses the horizon? After all, shouldn't the information of atomic bonds - one atom being inside the horizon, and one being outside of it - not be unable to cross from inside to outside?
    2. How does the full evaporation of the black hole look from Alice's perspective? Do parts of her body suddenly evaporate into hawking radiation?

  • @sLeeeTo
    @sLeeeTo 12 днів тому

    this was such a great video

  • @mastercontrolprogram82
    @mastercontrolprogram82 12 днів тому +1

    Massively interesting episode!

  • @petepanteraman
    @petepanteraman 11 днів тому

    Great job 👍👍 makes sense why it's been a wait, but worth it

    • @petepanteraman
      @petepanteraman 11 днів тому

      Also UA-cam won't let me like the video

  • @Infinite_Horizonsss
    @Infinite_Horizonsss 13 днів тому

    Thank for the video 🎉