• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Black Holes Can Apparently Have Two Different Masses At Once

November 4, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

A team modeling the behavior of black holes has come to the conclusion the masses of the universe’s densest objects are quantized, similar to the way electrons orbiting atoms can only have specific energies. Moreover, just as particles can simultaneously be in multiple places at once, known as superposition, the authors of a new paper claim black holes can have two masses, being simultaneously a combination of a probability of each mass. If you’re struggling to grasp these concepts don’t worry too much, even the authors of a paper admit it wasn’t what they expected.

“We all know e=mc2,” Dr Magdalena Zych of the University of Queensland told IFLScience. “If we look at how atoms are formed from elementary particles summing the mass of the nucleons does not give the total mass of the atom. The atom’s mass also includes some binding energy, and that energy is quantized.” This means the mass of the atom cannot be any value because there are only certain amounts the binding energy can be.

Advertisement

Being made up of atoms, macroscopic objects like ourselves are also limited to specific masses. “For macroscopic objects like us the difference is so tiny it is irrelevant,” Zych said, but that may not be the case for black holes. In particular, the impossible masses might be quite important during their formation and when they evaporate due to Hawking Radiation. 

The team reached the conclusion by considering the behavior of a particle outside a black hole and considering how it would interact with the black hole’s gravitational force without violating known laws. However, it’s a long way to the nearest black hole to actually conduct a test.

The fact that certain black hole masses may be disallowed may be something non-physicists don’t find too hard to swallow, but the other aspect to this work is something else. “Imagine you’re both broad and tall, as well as short and skinny at the same time – it’s a situation which is intuitively confusing since we’re anchored in the world of traditional physics,” said first author PhD student Joshua Foo in a statement. Yet if the team is right, it’s true for black holes, just as Schrödinger’s cat can be simultaneously alive and dead.

Advertisement

“The universe is revealing to us that it’s always more strange, mysterious and fascinating than most of us could have ever imagined,” Zych said.

What the team doesn’t yet know, Zych told IFLScience, is whether superpositions would involve masses so similar to each other they would make no difference outside idealized conditions, or if large differences are possible.

Zych acknowledged the work is just mathematical modeling at this stage and will be hard to test. “The next step is to look into the implications for black holes we are studying,” Zych said, whether those be relatively nearby, or the supermassive black holes at the heart of other galaxies.

Advertisement

If the work stands up to wider scrutiny, it could shape the search for quantum gravity, the effort to unite the two great theories of the 20th century, General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics. “If so, any model of quantum gravity would have a very tight restriction,” Zych told IFLScience, “Particularly in the final stages of evaporation. It’s one of the most mind-bending projects.”

The study is published in Physical Review Letters

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Buttler, Leach added to England squad for final India test
  2. Jetty raises $23M to help give renters more payment flexibility
  3. Swedish budget gives boost for welfare, climate, jobs
  4. German Social Democrats upbeat about three-way coalition talks

Source Link: Black Holes Can Apparently Have Two Different Masses At Once

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • This Is The First Ever Map Of The Entire Sky In An Incredible 102 Infrared Colors
  • Was Jesus Christ Actually Born On December 25?
  • Is It True There Are Two Places On Earth Where You Can Walk Directly On The Mantle?
  • Around 90 Percent Of People Report Personality Changes After An Organ Transplant – Why?
  • This Worm Quietly Lived In A Lab For Decades, But They Had No Idea Just How Old It Truly Was
  • Fewer Than 50 Of These Carnivorous “Large Mouth” Plants Exist In The World – Will Humans Drive Them To Extinction?
  • These Are The Best Fictional Spaceships, According To Astronauts – What Are Yours?
  • Can I See Comet 3I/ATLAS From Earth During Its Closest Approach Today? Yes, Here’s How
  • The Earliest Winter Solstice Rituals Go All The Way Back To The Stone Age
  • We Were F*&@ing Right – Swearing Is Good For You And Now We Know Why
  • Why Do Wombats Have Square Poop? New Discovery Reveals How Their “Latrines” May Act Like Dating Apps
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Answering Some Of The Biggest Scientific Mysteries Of 2025
  • Astronomers Catch Incredible First Direct Images Of Objects Colliding In Another Star System
  • Billionaire Jared Isaacman Finally Confirmed As Head Of NASA, As Agency Faces Uncertain Future
  • Something Just Crashed Into The Moon – And Astronomers Captured The Whole Event
  • These “Living Rocks” Are Among The Oldest Surviving Life And Are Champion Carbon Dioxide Absorbers
  • Ambitious Iguana “Love Island” For Near-Extinct Reptiles Becomes Epic Conservation Success Story
  • Sol 1,540: NASA Releases Video Of Perseverance Rover’s Record-Breaking Drive On Mars
  • Why Carl Sagan Was Way Ahead Of His Time And The Legacy He Left Behind
  • Why Were Pompeii Victims All Wearing Thick Woolly Cloaks In August?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version