Pesquisadores sugerem que a informação pode escapar de um buraco negro

sexta-feira, agosto 12, 2011

Escaping Gravity's Clutches: Information Could Escape from Black Holes After All, Study Suggests

ScienceDaily (Aug. 11, 2011) — New research by scientists at the University of York gives a fresh perspective on the physics of black holes. Black holes are objects in space that are so massive and compact they were described by Einstein as "bending" space. Conventional thinking asserts that black holes swallow everything that gets too close and that nothing can escape, but the study by Prof. Samuel Braunstein and Dr. Manas Patra suggests that information could escape from black holes after all.



Conventional thinking asserts that black holes swallow everything that gets too close and that nothing can escape, but a new study suggests that information could escape from black holes after all. (Credit: iStockphoto)

The implications could be revolutionary, suggesting that gravity may not be a fundamental force of nature.

Prof. Braunstein says: "Our results didn't need the details of a black hole's curved space geometry. That lends support to recent proposals that space, time and even gravity itself may be emergent properties within a deeper theory. Our work subtly changes those proposals, by identifying quantum information theory as the likely candidate for the source of an emergent theory of gravity."

But quantum mechanics is the theory of light and atoms, and many physicists are skeptical that it could be used to explain the slow evaporation of black holes without incorporating the effects of gravity.

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Read more here/Leia mais aqui: Science Daily

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Black hole evaporation rates without spacetime

Samuel L. Braunstein, Manas K. Patra

(Submitted on 11 Feb 2011 (v1), last revised 10 Aug 2011 (this version, v2))

Verlinde recently suggested that gravity, inertia, and even spacetime may be emergent properties of an underlying thermodynamic theory. This vision was motivated in part by Jacobson's 1995 surprise result that the Einstein equations of gravity follow from the thermodynamic properties of event horizons. Taking a first tentative step in such a program, we derive the evaporation rate (or radiation spectrum) from black hole event horizons in a spacetime-free manner. Our result relies on a Hilbert space description of black hole evaporation, symmetries therein which follow from the inherent high dimensionality of black holes, global conservation of the no-hair quantities, and the existence of Penrose processes. Our analysis is not wedded to standard general relativity and so should apply to extended gravity theories where we find that the black hole area must be replaced by some other property in any generalized area theorem.

Comments: 8 pages, including supplementary material

Subjects: Quantum Physics (quant-ph); General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology (gr-qc); High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th)

Journal reference: Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 071302 (2011)


Cite as: arXiv:1102.2326v2 [quant-ph]

Submission historyFrom: Samuel Braunstein [view email
[v1] Fri, 11 Feb 2011 11:13:22 GMT (14kb)
[v2] Wed, 10 Aug 2011 08:58:56 GMT (17kb)

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