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The solution, Adami says, is that the information is contained in the stimulated emission of radiation, which must accompany the Hawking radiation—the glow that makes a black hole not so black. Stimulated emission makes the black hole glow in the information that it swallowed.
funbox
reply to post by Soylent Green Is People
what type of information is the black hole consuming ? and what type of information is spewed out upon death , strange word to use 'information'
funBox
QuestioningDude
reply to post by Soylent Green Is People
Forgive my lack of knowledge on the subject but why exactly does quantum theory forbid the destruction of information?
funbox
reply to post by Soylent Green Is People
what type of information is the black hole consuming ? and what type of information is spewed out upon death , strange word to use 'information'
funBox
The black hole information paradox results from the combination of quantum mechanics and general relativity. It suggests that physical information could permanently disappear in a black hole, allowing many physical states to devolve into the same state. This is controversial because it violates a commonly assumed tenet of science—that in principle complete information about a physical system at one point in time should determine its state at any other time. A fundamental postulate of quantum mechanics is that complete information about a system is encoded in its wave function up to when the wave function collapses. The evolution of the wave function is determined by a unitary operator, and unitarity implies that information is conserved in the quantum sense. This is the strictest form of determinism.
Not any longer, since Hawking wrote a 2 page paper not too long ago which allegedly resolves the paradox, but from a 2 page paper it's hard to say if it really does resolve anything:
Soylent Green Is People
the "Hawking Paradox", and has bothered physicists (including Hawking, who himself sees the paradox) for years.
Personally I don't have such a problem with losing information in black holes, but maybe that's because I only took one post-graduate course in quantum mechanics which was enlightening but doesn't exactly make me an expert.
Does Hawking mind being wrong?
Everyone hates being wrong – and Hawking is human. On his 70th birthday, he told New Scientist that he regards his idea that information was destroyed by black holes, which later turned out to be wrong, as his "biggest blunder" – in science, at least.
funbox
reply to post by Soylent Green Is People
what type of information is the black hole consuming ? and what type of information is spewed out upon death , strange word to use 'information'
funBox