zer0netgain wrote:
Makes sense.
Do you need infinite density to create a "black hole" or just enough to bend light back onto itself by perpetually curving it. Maybe the energy that "spits out" of a "black hole" is the result of this energy swirling around until it reaches a critical state.
Infinite density is not needed. Once the mass of an object becomes large enough for its gravity to be able to pull light in without light being able to escape, then it has the requisite density.
Black holes "evaporate" by the formation of virtual particles near the event horizon - one falls into the black hole and the other escapes. This leaches energy/matter away from the black hole. Eventually the black hole can shrink enough that its event horizon meets its outer limit and that's when things start to get more interesting and you get a gamma ray flash.
It is now thought that matter within a black hole doesn't collapse into a singularity of infinite density, but that it forms a 'planck star'. A bit disappointing in a way, but more realistic and likely. Just need someone to figure out what a finger print of the gamma ray flash would look like and to see if it can be detected by astronomers.
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I've left WP indefinitely.