HPS 0410 Einstein for Everyone Spring 2024

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Assignment 11: Black Holes

For submission in Canvas
Canvas question may have different formats.

1. Why do black holes result from gravitation and not, say, from electric or magnetic attractions?

2. What sorts of objects in our universe are candidates for collapse into a black hole?

3. In the context of a black hole, what are (a) the singularity; (b) the event horizon; (c) tidal forces?

4. In the conformal diagram of the Minkowski spacetime below, there are space travelers at event A, B, C and D. Which of them can travel to the event E?  Explain.

For discussion in the recitation.

A. Minkowski spacetimes are well-behaved in so far as there are no inaccessible regions. Illustrate this by picking any event in the conformal diagram of the Minkowski spacetime and showing that it can always be reached by some space traveler, who proceeds from past timelike infinity at less than the speed of light.

B.If black holes let no light escape, how is it possible for us identify candidate black holes among what our telescopes see in the sky?

C. (a) What prevents the gravitational collapse of planets?
(b) What prevents the gravitational collapse of stars?

D. What are three differences between a Newtonian and a relativistic black hole?

E. Here are conformal diagrams of a Minkowski spacetime and fully extended, Schwarzschild black hole.

Minkowski           black hole


Using both words and the appropriate symbols, label:
future timelike infinity
past timelike infinity
future lightlike infinity
past lightlike infinity
spacelike infinity
future singularity
past singularity
event horizon

F. (a) Use the conformal diagram of a Schwarzschild black hole below to show that a traveler cannot pass from the world of region III to that of region I; and that light signals also cannot pass from region III to I.

black hole

(b) Use the conformal diagram to show that travelers from the worlds of regions I and III can meet.

Cc) Use the conformal diagram to show that an outside observer can only see a portion of the trajectory of a traveler who falls into the black hole.

G. We have learned repeatedly to be suspicious of things that are supposed to exist but whose properties are so set up as to make our detecting them impossible. Is the world of region III such a thing? We, in region I, cannot visit it or receive signals from it; and no one from region III can visit or signal us in region I.