White Hole
In general relativity, a white hole is
a hypothetical region of spacetime which cannot be entered from the outside,
although matter and light can escape from
it. In this sense, it is the reverse of a black hole,
which can only be entered from the outside and from which matter and light
cannot escape. White holes appear in the theory of eternal black holes. In addition to a black
hole region in the future, such a solution of the Einstein field equations has a white
hole region in its past.[1] However,
this region does not exist for black holes that have formed through gravitational collapse, nor are there any
known physical processes through which a white hole could be formed. Although
information and evidence regarding white holes remains inconclusive, the
2006 GRB 060614 has
been proposed as the first documented occurrence of a white hole.
Like black holes,
white holes have properties like mass, charge,
and angular momentum. They attract matter like any
other mass, but objects falling towards a white hole would never actually reach
the white hole's event horizon (though in the case of
the maximally extended Schwarzschild solution,
discussed below, the white hole event horizon in the past becomes a black hole
event horizon in the future, so any object falling towards it will eventually
reach the black hole horizon). Imagine a gravitational field, without a
surface. Acceleration due to gravity is the greatest on the surface of any
body. But since black holes lack a surface, acceleration due to gravity
increases exponentially, but never reaches a final value as there is no
considered surface in a singularity.
In quantum
mechanics, the black hole emits Hawking
radiation and so can come to thermal equilibrium with a gas of
radiation (not compulsory). Because a thermal-equilibrium state is
time-reversal-invariant, Stephen
Hawking argued that the time reverse of a black hole in thermal
equilibrium is again a black hole in thermal equilibrium. This may imply
that black holes and white holes are the same object. The Hawking radiation
from an ordinary black hole is then identified with the white-hole emission.
Hawking's semi-classical argument is reproduced in a quantum mechanical AdS/CFT treatment, where a black
hole in anti-de Sitter space is described by
a thermal gas in a gauge theory, whose time reversal is the same as itself.
Extinction:
In this spacetime, it is possible to come up with coordinate systems such that if you pick a hypersurface of constant time (a set of points that all have the same time coordinate, such that every point on the surface has a space-like separation, giving what is called a 'space-like surface') and draw an "embedding diagram" depicting the curvature of space at that time, the embedding diagram will look like a tube connecting the two exterior regions, known as an "Einstein-Rosen bridge" or Schwarzschild wormhole.
Depending on where the space-like hypersurface is chosen, the Einstein-Rosen bridge can either connect two black hole event horizons in each universe (with points in the interior of the bridge being part of the black hole region of the spacetime), or two white hole event horizons in each universe (with points in the interior of the bridge being part of the white hole region). It is impossible to use the bridge to cross from one universe to the other, however, because it is impossible to enter a white hole event horizon from the outside, and anyone entering a black hole horizon from either universe will inevitably hit the black hole Singularity.Just as there are two separate interior regions of the maximally extended spacetime, there are also two separate exterior regions, sometimes called two different "universes", with the second universe allowing us to extrapolate some possible particle trajectories in the two interior regions.
This means that the interior black-hole region can contain a mix of particles that fell in from either universe (and thus an observer who fell in from one universe might be able to see light that fell in from the other one), and likewise particles from the interior white-hole region can escape into either universe. All four regions can be seen in a spacetime diagram which uses Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates. see figure.[5]The possibility of the existence of white holes was put forward by Russian cosmologist Igor Novikov in 1964. White holes are predicted as part of a solution to the Einstein field equations known as the maximally extended version of the Schwarzschild metricdescribing an eternal black hole with no charge and no rotation. Here, "maximally extended" refers to the idea that the spacetime should not have any "edges": for any possible trajectory of a free-falling particle (following a geodesic) in the spacetime, it should be possible to continue this path arbitrarily far into the particle's future, unless the trajectory hits a gravitational singularity like the one at the center of the black hole's interior. In order to satisfy this requirement, it turns out that in addition to the black hole interior region which particles enter when they fall through the event horizon from the outside, there must be a separate white hole interior region, which allows us to extrapolate the trajectories of particles which an outside observer sees rising up away from the event horizon. For an observer outside using Schwarzschild coordinates, infalling particles take an infinite time to reach the black hole horizon infinitely far in the future, while outgoing particles which pass the observer have been traveling outward for an infinite time since crossing the white hole horizon infinitely far in the past (however, the particles or other objects experience only a finite proper time between crossing the horizon and passing the outside observer). There is little evidence of white holes, though. The black hole/white hole appears "eternal" from the perspective of an outside observer, in the sense that particles traveling outward from the white hole interior region can pass the observer at any time, and particles traveling inward which will eventually reach the black hole interior region can also pass the observer at any time.
Note that the
maximally extended Schwarzschild metric describes an idealized black hole/white
hole that exists eternally from the perspective of external observers; a more
realistic black hole that forms at some particular time from a collapsing star
would require a different metric. When the infalling stellar matter is added to
a diagram of a black hole's history, it removes the part of the diagram
corresponding to the white hole interior region. But because the equations of
general relativity are time-reversible, (they exhibit T-symmetry),
general relativity must also allow the time-reverse of this type of
"realistic" black hole that forms from collapsing matter. The
time-reversed case would be a white hole that has existed since the beginning
of the universe, and which emits matter until it finally "explodes"
and disappearsDespite
the fact that such objects are permitted theoretically, they are not taken as
seriously as black holes by physicists, since there would be no processes that
would naturally lead to their formation, they could only exist if they were
built into the initial conditions of the Big Bang. Additionally,
it is predicted that such a white hole would be highly "unstable" in
the sense that if any small amount of matter fell towards the horizon from the
outside, this would prevent the white hole's explosion as seen by distant
observers, with the matter emitted from the singularity never able to escape
the white hole's gravitational radius.
A
view of black holes first proposed in the late 1980s might be interpreted as
shedding some light on the nature of classical white holes. Some
researchers have proposed that when a black hole forms, a big bang may occur at
the core, which would create a new universe that expands outside of the parent
universe.
Einstein theory:
The Einstein–Cartan–Sciama–Kibble theory
of gravity extends general relativity by removing a constraint of the symmetry
of the affine connection and regarding its antisymmetric part, the torsion
tensor, as a dynamical variable. Torsion naturally accounts for the
quantum-mechanical, intrinsic angular momentum (spin)
of matter. According to general relativity, the gravitational collapse of a
sufficiently compact mass forms a singular black hole. In the Einstein–Cartan
theory, however, the minimal coupling between torsion and Dirac spinorsgenerates
a repulsive spin–spin interaction which is significant in fermionic
matter at extremely high densities. Such an interaction
prevents the formation of a gravitational singularity. Instead, the collapsing
matter on the other side of the event horizon reaches an enormous but finite
density and rebounds, forming a regular Einstein–Rosen bridge.The other side of
the bridge becomes a new, growing baby universe. For observers in the baby
universe, the parent universe appears as the only white hole. Accordingly,
the observable universe is the Einstein–Rosen
interior of a black hole existing as one of possibly many inside a larger
universe. The Big Bang was a nonsingular Big Bounce at
which the observable universe had a finite, minimum scale factor.
A 2011 paper
argues that the Big Bang itself is a white hole. It further suggests that
the emergence of a white hole, which was named a 'Small Bang', is
spontaneous—all the matter is ejected at a single pulse. Thus, unlike black
holes, white holes cannot be continuously observed—rather their effect can only
be detected around the event itself. The paper even proposed identifying a new
group of gamma-ray bursts with white holes. The
idea of the Big Bang being produced by a white hole explosion was recently
explored in the framework of a five dimensional vacuum by Madriz Aguilar,
Moreno and Bellini in the paper.
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