Black Hole Information Paradox without Hawking Radiation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Entropy with (Almost) No Energy
3. Dropping Entropy into the Black Hole
3.1. Theoretical Aspects
3.2. Practical Aspects
- 1.
- Fine tuning of initial conditions. Hawking radiation can be described in terms of wave packets [1] that are well-localized near the horizon initially, but widely spread around the black hole in the final state. The Schwarzschild black hole is time-independent, so the wave equation in the Schwarzschild background is time-inversion-invariant. Hence, there exist time-inverted solutions of the wave equation that describe wave packets which are widely spread around the black hole initially but localized near the horizon when the packet approaches the horizon. No known principle of physics forbids the preparation of such wave packets, which makes the wave packet absorption possible in principle. In practice, however, a preparation of such a wave packet would require a fine tuning of the initial conditions, suggesting that this approach might be too difficult in practice.
- 2.
- Engineering tricks. Instead of dealing with the fine tuning of initial conditions, one can devise various engineering tricks that can help the wave packet to enter the black hole. One possibility is to build a wave guide shaped such that it is wide far from the horizon but narrow near the horizon. Another possibility is to build the quantum-optics laboratory near the horizon, so that the wave packet is localized near the horizon initially. With this second possibility the photons may have a much larger initial energy as measured by observers in the laboratory, because their contribution to the b.h. mass is determined by the small red-shifted energy measured by observers far from the black hole. Of course, keeping the wave guide or the laboratory at a stable position near the horizon may lead to additional practical problems, but in principle such problems are not insurmountable.
- 3.
- Many trials. An atom can absorb a photon with a wavelength much larger than the size of the atom [22]. The catch, of course, is that such absorption is not a classical deterministic process. The absorption is a quantum “jump”, the probability of which is very small. A black hole can absorb a soft photon in the same sense, the probability of which is very small because the cross section of photon scattering on a black hole is of the same order of magnitude as the b.h. area [23]. The small probability p of absorption of a single copy of (2) can be overcome by a large number of trials, with each trial performed with another copy of (2). In this way, the number N of successful trials for which the photons are actually absorbed is
4. Resolution of the Paradox—Useless Approaches
- No Hawking radiation. One logical possibility is that Hawking radiation does not exist [24]. While it obviously avoids the standard b.h. information paradox, it does not help because our paradox does not depend on the existence of Hawking radiation.
- New physics for small black holes. Proposals of this sort include Planck-sized remnants [25], the creation of a baby-universe [3], and the sudden escape of information, perhaps via tunneling into a white hole [26]. Presumably all such events happen when the black hole becomes sufficiently small, which is useless for our purpose because our version of the information paradox exists also for large black holes.
- Mild modifications of horizon physics. One possibility is that quantum fluctuations at the horizon allow a slow leak of information [3]. Another possibility is that pre-Hawking radiation prevents the creation of an apparent horizon [27,28]. Since such scenarios involve rather slow processes (slow leaking or slow pre-Hawking radiation in the examples above), they are essentially useless because their effect may easily be overpowered by dropping many copies of () at almost the same time.
- Radical modifications of horizon physics. It has been proposed that quantum gravity effects make the b.h. horizon totally impenetrable, due to a fuzzball [29], an energetic curtain [30], or a firewall [31] at . How could such an impenetrable barrier act in an attempt to drop () into the hole? If the dropped particles accumulated in a small region in front of the wall, that would be useless because (7) would again violate any reasonable entropy bound in that small region. Alternatively, if the dropping would result in a fast recoil of the dropped particles such that the particles could not accumulate near , that would resolve our version of the b.h. information paradox. However, such a recoil would be observed in astrophysical black holes such as the one in the center of our galaxy, which is not what we observe. One might argue that we do not observe it yet because the firewall forms only after a very long time (Page time [32]), but then we are back to the problem that the fast dropping of entropy can violate any reasonable entropy bound, long before the firewall forms.
- Complementarity. Even though quantum cloning contradicts unitarity, according to the b.h. complementarity principle [33], it is acceptable as long as no single observer can see both copies. This means that one copy of (2) can be destroyed in the black hole, while the other copy can remain outside of the black hole. The outside copies must either be accumulated near or recoiled, leading to the same problems as with the firewall above.
- Decoherence and many worlds. The radiation of a single Hawking particle is a random quantum event. The particle energy can take any value from a large range of possible values. Unitarity, combined with decoherence induced by the macroscopic environment, implies that the total wave function of the universe contains all the branches corresponding to all possible energies of Hawking particles. While it may help to resolve the standard b.h. information paradox [34,35,36,37,38,39,40], here it is useless because the states and in (2) have the same energy and can be chosen to be indistinguishable at the macroscopic level. This means that the macroscopic environment cannot distinguish from and therefore cannot create different branches.
- Soft hair. It has been argued that a black hole has infinitely many soft supertranslation hairs, such that Hawking radiation can be entangled with that hair [41]. This can help to resolve the standard b.h. information paradox, but here it is useless because it does not influence our mechanism for the violation of entropy bounds before evaporation.
5. Resolution of the Paradox—Potentially Useful Approaches
- Information destroyed in the singularity. If, as originally proposed by Hawking [2], any excess of information induced by Hawking radiation is destroyed in the b.h. singularity, then so is any excess of information dropped into the black hole by our mechanism. In this sense, information destruction in the singularity is probably the simplest resolution of our version of the paradox. It has been argued that such a non-unitary evolution violates energy–momentum conservation or locality [42], but a more careful analysis reveals that this is not the case for systems with a large number of degrees of freedom [43]. Moreover, by treating time as a local quantum observable, such information destruction can be reinterpreted as a unitary process in disguise [44,45,46,47,48].
- ER=EPR and islands. According to the ER = EPR conjecture [49], the left and right subsystems in (1) are connected by a wormhole. Therefore, instead of being destroyed in the singularity at , the left subsystem can escape from the black hole through the wormhole. Such an escape that bypasses the horizon resolves our version of the b.h. information paradox. A more precise version of this idea involves a black hole island [50], a region in black hole that due to a wormhole should be thought of as a part of the b.h exterior, rather than the interior.
- Gravitational crystal. By analogy with condensed-matter physics, it has been proposed that general relativity is merely a macroscopic description of a fluid phase of some unknown fundamental degrees of freedom [51]. These fundamental degrees can also exist in a crystal phase that does not obey the laws of general relativity. Instead of being destroyed in the singularity at , any excess of information in the black hole is absorbed by a crystal core formed around the center at . The entropy of the core scales with its volume , so, instead of (6), the relevant entropy bound is with . Consequently, the core continuously grows as new information arrives [51]. In this way, since general relativity is not valid in the crystal phase, the core can penetrate the horizon from the inside and become even larger than .
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Nikolić, H. Black Hole Information Paradox without Hawking Radiation. Universe 2023, 9, 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9010011
Nikolić H. Black Hole Information Paradox without Hawking Radiation. Universe. 2023; 9(1):11. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9010011
Chicago/Turabian StyleNikolić, Hrvoje. 2023. "Black Hole Information Paradox without Hawking Radiation" Universe 9, no. 1: 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9010011
APA StyleNikolić, H. (2023). Black Hole Information Paradox without Hawking Radiation. Universe, 9(1), 11. https://doi.org/10.3390/universe9010011