"Hawking's intitial foray into quantum gravity was more modest than Wheeler's and other[s]... a sneak approach. He first wanted to know what the effect was of an ordinary, classic, curved-space gravitational field on a quantum system. He called this the semiclassical approach. Until that day, most quantum calculations had been done as if gravity didn't exist—they were hard enough without it in normal flat space-time... [Hawking accomplished this by] envisioning an "atom" whose nucleus was a catastrophically powerful black hole... Starobinsky ventured the opinion that rotating black holes would spray elementary particles. ...It was known from Penrose's work, among others, that you could extract energy from the spin of a black hole just like any other dynamo... in particles and radiation just like it did from a particle generator. ...But Hawking ...resolved to redo the calculation for himself ...he decided to warm up first, by calculating the rate of emission from a nonrotating quantum hole. He knew the answer should be no emission. ...his results were embarrassing. His imaginary black hole was spewing matter and radiation... he was reluctant to tell anybody but his closest friends; he was afraid Bekenstein would hear about it. ...It meant that holes had temperatures, just as Bekenstein's work implied."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Dennis Overbye, Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos: The Scientific Quest for the Secrets of the Universe (1992)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Black_hole
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Black hole
21 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Black hole →
Related Quotes
"A star does not evolve over its lifetime through each spectral type, as Russell once thought; rather, each star exper…"
"After the nuclear fuel is used up, the star goes into a state of gravitational collapse. All parts of the star fall m…"
""Schwarzschild's solution"—revealed a stunning implication of general relativity. He showed that if the mass of a sta…"
"Black holes have the universe's most inscrutable poker faces. ...When you've seen one black hole with a given mass, c…"
"A natural guess is that... a black hole's entropy is... proportional to its volume. But in the 1970s and Stephen Hawk…"
"[F]or a physicist, the upper limit to entropy... is a critical, almost sacred quantity. ...the Bekenstein and Hawking…"
"The subject of this book is the structure of space-time on length-scales from 10-13 cm, the radius of an elementary p…"
"So Einstein was wrong when he said, "God does not play dice." Consideration of black holes suggests, not only that Go…"
"I'm sorry to disappoint science fiction fans, but if information is preserved, there is no possibility of using black…"
"Black holes ain't as black as they are painted. They are not the eternal prisons they were once thought. Things can g…"