Chapter 24 Black Holes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 24 Black Holes

Description:

Called 'black' because gravity is so strong that even light can not escape. ... The distance from the center of the black hole to the event horizon is called ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:192
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 52
Provided by: ScottN
Learn more at: https://www.nku.edu
Category:
Tags: black | chapter | holes

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 24 Black Holes


1
Chapter 24Black Holes
  • Black Holes are out of sight!

2
Black Holes
  • Created when core of star is greater than about 5
    M ?
  • Called black because gravity is so strong that
    even light can not escape.
  • The idea of a black hole is a very strange one.
  • To understand them we have to discard some
    commonsense ideas that we have about space
    time.

3
Newtonian Worldview
  • According to Newton
  • Space is perfectly uniform and fills the universe
    like a rigid frame.
  • Distance between two points is the same no matter
    who measures it.
  • Time passes at an unchanging rate.
  • Time elapsed between two events (eg two
    lightning strikes) is the same irrespective of
    whos measuring.

4
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Einsteins special theory of relativity is
    based on two basic principles
  • Your description of physical reality is the same
    regardless of the constant velocity at which you
    are moving.
  • If you are moving in a train at say 100km/h, then
    the length of your arm, and the time interval
    between the ticks of your watch are the same as
    if your train was moving in any other direction
    at any other speed (or not moving at all).

5
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Regardless of your speed or the direction of
    motion, you always measure the speed of light to
    be the same.
  • Suppose you are traveling in a space ship at a
    speed of 99 of the speed of light towards a
    flashlight. You will measure the speed of the
    photons approaching you to be c, the same as an
    observer on a stationary space ship would observe
    it.
  • This conflicts with Newtonian view, where the
    speeds should add up.

6
Special Theory of Relativity
7
Special Theory of Relativity
8
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Therefore, speed behaves differently in
    relativity than we are familiar with.
  • Since speed involves both space(distance) and
    time, they two behave strangely.
  • According to relativity, space and time seem to
    be intertwined, and are not two unrelated
    entities as described by Newton.
  • In relativity we regard the 3 space dimensions
    and time as a single four dimensional entity
    called spacetime.

9
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Einstein made several predictions based on these
    two principles.
  • Length contraction the length of an object that
    you measure depends on how the object is moving.
  • The faster the object moves the shorter its
    length in the direction of motion.
  • Therefore, a railroad car moving past a
    stationary observer at the railway station will
    look shorter to the observer than if it were at
    rest.

10
Special Theory of Relativity
11
Special Theory of Relativity
  • However, if you were inside the train and
    measure its length, it will be the same length as
    measured from the ground when the train is at
    rest.
  • The degree of shortening or length contraction
    depends on the relative speeds between the
    observer and the object being measured.
  • Although, we cannot see such a shortening in
    ordinary moving objects (airplanes), it has been
    observed in fast traveling subatomic particles.

12
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Time dilation A clock moving past you runs more
    slowly than a clock that is at rest.
  • Suppose you have two identical clocks, one place
    in a jet, and the other kept on the ground. When
    the jet landed the clock on it showed that it has
    less time elapsed than the one on the ground.
  • However, for the passengers on the jet, time
    flowed at the normal pace, the clock ticked at
    the regular rate, their hearts beat at the same
    rate, etc.
  • Compared to the people on the ground you have
    aged less.

13
Special Theory of Relativity
  • Relativity does not imply that nothing is
    absolute and every thing is relative
  • speed of light in a vacuum and the laws of
    physics are absolute irrespective of how things
    are moving.
  • These effects are real, and are not illusions.
  • Einsteins special theory of relativity also
    predicts another relationship ? E mc2 .

14
Special Theory of Relativity
  • According the theory of relativity nothing in
    this universe can travel faster than the speed of
    light in a vacuum ? c 3.0 ? 108 m/s or
    186,000miles/sec

15
General Theory of Relativity
  • Newtons Theory of gravity was based on the
    premise that space time are absolute.
  • Not satisfied with this picture, Einstein argued
  • Gravity causes objects to accelerate (move)
  • Moving objects affects the length of meter rulers
    and the tick of a clock that are moving with the
    object.
  • Gravity must affect the shape of space flow of
    time
  • Using a simple thought experiment Einstein showed
    that gravity must affect the shape of space and
    the flow of time.

16
General Theory of Relativity
17
General Theory of Relativity
  • Einstein showed that there is no way to
    distinguish between an apple falling to the floor
    on Earth and the apparent motion of an apple
    inside an elevator accelerating up in a remote
    region of the universe(far from the gravitational
    influences of Earth and other objects)
  • Equivalence principle in a small volume of
    space, the downward pull of gravity can be
    accurately and completely duplicated by an upward
    acceleration of the observer.

18
General Theory of Relativity
  • Einstein built his theory around the observation
    that acceleration due to gravity cannot be
    distinguished from acceleration due to any other
    force - The equivalence principle.
  • The effects of special relativity that apply
    when objects are accelerated to near the speed of
    light - space being compressed, clocks slowing
    down - must also apply to objects moving in
    intense gravitational fields - near massive
    objects.
  • Gravity (massive objects) distorts space and
    time, causing space to become curved and time to
    slow down.

19
General Theory of Relativity
  • According to Einsteins General Theory of
    Relativity, gravity is caused by the curvature
    of spacetime
  • Far away from Earth (or any other source of
    gravity) spacetime is flat.
  • Near the massive objects (Earth) spacetime is
    warped - clocks slow down space gets curved.
  • Apple falls to the ground because that is the
    natural trajectory the apple can follow due to
    the space being curved near Earth.

20
General Theory of Relativity
Gravitational curvature of spacetime The massive
object resides at the bottom of the gravitational
well
21
General Theory of Relativity
  • Imagine a stretched bed sheet
  • If you place a ping pong ball on one side of this
    flat bed sheet it will not move in any preferred
    direction
  • However, now if you first place a heavy stone at
    the center of the bed sheet then place the ping
    pong ball at a corner it will move towards the
    gravitational well at the center - because the
    bed sheet now is curved and the ball is simply
    following its natural trajectory in this curved
    space.
  • This is a useful analogy to help you understand
    Einsteins gravity - general theory of relativity!

22
General Theory of Relativity
  • This explains why the acceleration due to gravity
    that an object(apple, cannon ball, etc.) will
    experience is independent of its mass.
  • The curvature of space has the same effect on all
    objects.
  • General theory of relativity has profound
    consequences for the way we think about the
    universe and these have been put to a variety of
    vigorous tests - and the theory has passed with
    flying colors.

23
General Theory of Relativity
  • Gravitational redshift
  • In his famous equation E mc2 Einstein showed
    that radiation has an equivalent mass, and
    therefore light must respond to gravity, just
    like particles do.
  • Photons leaving a massive objects suffer
    gravitational redshift, caused by the photons
    loosing energy as they climb out of the
    gravitational well.

24
General Theory of Relativity
  • The Gravitational Slowing of time
  • According to GTR, near a massive object (Earth)
    time is warped.
  • Clocks nearer to the Earths surface ticks more
    slowly than clocks at a higher elevations.

25
The gravitational slowing of time and
gravitational redshift
26
General Theory of Relativity
The gravitational bending of light Light bends
near a massive object because space near the
object is curved and light follows its natural
trajectory
27
General Theory of Relativity
The precession of Mercurys orbit
28
GTR predicts Black Holes
  • Newtons theories are only valid when you study
    objects having low speeds (compared to speed of
    light) and weak gravity.
  • The most bizarre prediction of GTR is that of the
    final outcome of a dying star with mass greater
    than about 3M?.
  • Nothing can resist the gravitational collapse of
    such a star.
  • GTR predicts that such a star will collapse to a
    point!! - all that mass that once was a star
    collapse to a point??? -

29
Black Holes
  • We can understand the nature of a black hole in
    terms of escape velocity.
  • Escape velocity of Earth, i.e. the speed that a
    rocket should gain in order to escape Earth
    gravity is 11 km/s. Sun 600 km/s.
  • Near a black hole the gravity is so strong that
    the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light -
    300,000 km/s.
  • Since nothing can travel faster than light,
    nothing escapes the gravitational pull of such an
    object - not even light.

30
Black Holes
The formation of a black hole
31
Black Holes
The formation of a black hole
32
Black Holes
  • Photons emitted by a normal star is only
    slightly affected by the stars gravity.
  • However, as a star keeps collapsing and
    compressing to enormous densities, the surface
    gravity of the shrinking sphere increases
    dramatically - and this increases the curvature
    of the surrounding region.
  • Until, the star collapses beyond a certain size,
    the space around it curves so much that it closes
    on itself.

33
Black Holes
  • Photons flying out of such an object becomes so
    redshifted they loose all the energy and cease to
    exist.
  • An object from which neither matter nor radiation
    can escape is called a Black Hole.
  • Near a black hole the spacetime is highly curved,
    it is as if a hole has been punctured in
    spacetime (the fabric of the universe)
  • In other words the gravitational well is
    infinitely deep!

34
Black Holes
  • Surrounding a black hole there is an imaginary
    sphere, where the escape velocity is just equal
    to the speed of light. This surface is referred
    to as the Event Horizon.
  • Beyond this surface nothing is visible.
  • The distance from the center of the black hole to
    the event horizon is called the Schwarzschild
    radius (RSch).
  • All the mass that once was a star has now been
    crushed to a single point at the center, known a
    the singularity.

35
The structure of a black hole
36
The spacetime structure of a black hole
37
Black Holes
  • Once an object crosses the event horizon, it is
    gone for ever.
  • Bizarre things happen inside a black hole
  • Far from a black hole you have the freedom to
    move about in space but have no control over the
    flow of time.
  • Inside a black hole however, gravity distorts
    space time. You loose your freedom to move in
    space but gain the ability to affect the passage
    of time!
  • At the singularity space time are jumbled up -
    they do not exist as two separate entities.

38
Black Holes
  • Therefore, the singularities at the center of a
    black hole do not obey laws of physics.
  • However, the random unpredictable thing that
    happen inside a black hole is shielded from the
    rest of the universe by the event horizon, since
    no information can pass beyond this surface.
  • In the words of the british mathematician Roger
    Penrose Nature abhors naked singularities
  • In other words, every singularity must be
    completely surrounded by an event horizon.

39
Black Holes
  • If you were unfortunate enough to fall into a
    black hole, you will be stretched like a
    spaghetti due to the immense tidal forces.
  • However, suppose you were able to send a space
    probe into a black hole and it survives the
    descent, then from the safety of an orbiting
    space ship, you will observe that the clock on
    the probe will slow down and eventually stop upon
    reaching the event horizon.
  • In other words, you will observe the space probe
    to slow down and it will take an infinite time to
    reach the event horizon.

40
Falling into a black hole
As the probe reaches the event horizon, it is
distorted in to a long, thin shape, and a distant
observer sees the color of the probe change as
the light from the probe is redshifted. The
probe will appear to take an infinite amount of
time to fall in.
41
Wormholes and Time Machines
  • Einstein discovered that GTR predicts the
    possibility that black holes could connect our
    universe to another parallel universe via an
    Einstein-Rosen bridge.
  • Such a bridge is called a worm hole.
  • A worm hole also could be connected to another
    part of our own universe.
  • However, theories suggest that these wormholes
    collapse as soon as they are formed.

42
Wormholes and Time Machines
  • Also, since traversing a wormhole means that you
    are emerging at a different spacetime domain
    than the one you started with, you could start at
    present time and emerge at a time in the past (or
    the future) - time travel!

43
Wormholes and Time Machines
44
Evaporation of Black Holes
  • Quantum mechanics predict the concept of virtual
    pairs of particles.
  • at every point in space pairs of particles and
    anti-particles are constantly being created and
    destroyed.
  • Usually, this takes place during an extremely
    brief moment, that it does not affect the
    universe and cannot be detected and don't break
    laws of physics
  • However, just outside the event horizon, if
    such a pair appears, one of them can be pulled
    into the black hole before they annihilate. The
    other member can escape to space.

45
Evaporation of Black Holes
The net result is that some energy is taken from
the black hole. This decreases the mass of the
black hole according to E mc2. This was
predicted by Stephen Hawking and could provide a
way of detecting a black hole - Hawking Radiation
46
Black Holes in Binary systems
  • Black holes do not emit light, and therefore
    cannot be observed directly.
  • However, their gravity is strong and would affect
    the orbits of close by objects
  • Therefore, close binary systems provide us with
    the best way of detecting a Black Hole.
  • Black Hole candidate Cygnus X-1 X-ray Source

47
Black Holes in Binary systems
  • Cygnus X-1 is a peculiar X- ray source with
    highly irregular X-ray pulses.
  • The companion star of Cygnus X-1 is a 30M? B0
    supergiant, and from its orbit astronomers can
    estimate the unseen member is at least a 7M?
    object - a black hole?
  • The material from the supergiant gradually
    spirals in towards the black hole, as it does
    friction heats up the gas. Very near the event
    horizon the temperatures reach extremely high
    levels and the hot gas emit X-rays.

48
Black Holes in Binary systems
  • The argument that Cygnus X-1 is a black hole is
    not airtight. Some critics have other possible
    explanations.
  • Astronomers have found many other black hole
    candidates in binary systems

49
Supermassive Black Holes in Galactic centers
  • During the formation of galaxies, the gas at the
    galactic centers could compress due to its own
    gravity.
  • If these regions get sufficiently dense, a black
    hole can form.
  • Since, the amount of gas at the galactic centers
    are enormous compared to even the most massive
    stars, these black holes are referred to as
    Supermassive blackholes.
  • A good example of such a black hole was
    photographed by the Hubble at the center of the
    M87 galaxy.

50
Black Holes in Binary systems
  • By measuring the speed of the material orbiting
    this tiny bright source of light at the center of
    M87, astronomers have calculated the mass of it
    to be three billion solar masses! Others like M87
    have been found.

51
Primordial Black Holes
  • In 1970s Stephan Hawking proposed the possibility
    that during the extremely hot and dense epoch of
    the universe just after the Bing Bang , local
    regions could have become dense enough to form
    black holes that have very small masses -
    Primordial Black holes
  • These can have masses as large as Earths mass
    or smaller than a rain drop.
  • However, to date we have not seen any evidence of
    these exotic objects.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com