It can be inferred from the first paragraph that Hawking radiation puzzled Stephen Hawking because:The radiation from the black hole reconciled general relativity with quantum mechanics.The radiation from the black hole confirmed that information is neither lost nor created.The radiation from the black hole carried no information about its past or future.The radiation from the black hole ensured the certainty of an event within the scope of all possible outcomes.
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It can be inferred from the first paragraph that Hawking radiation puzzled Stephen Hawking because:The radiation from the black hole reconciled general relativity with quantum mechanics.The radiation from the black hole confirmed that information is neither lost nor created.The radiation from the black hole carried no information about its past or future.The radiation from the black hole ensured the certainty of an event within the scope of all possible outcomes.
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Hawking’s discovery of the Hawking radiation, possible through thought experiment, brought general relativity and quantum theory together in a remarkable way. But Hawking was puzzled by features of this radiation – or more precisely, its lack of features. Critical to the probability interpretation of quantum mechanics was that something always happens. If you add up the probabilities for anything that may happen, you will find that the total probability is one. This can be formulated as a statement about information: if one knows everything one can know about a system at one time, one can know everything about it at later times. But this did not seem to be the case for radiation from black holes.These ideas may be unfamiliar – so it is worth elaborating a bit. If you enter a lottery and buy one ticket and there are 10 million lottery tickets sold, your chances of winning the jackpot are 1 in 10 million. But you either win or lose the lottery: the chance of winning or losing is 100 per cent.What does it mean for information to disappear? Of course, we all forget things… but we believe that we could, in time, reconstruct this information. The amount of information in a system doesn’t change, though it may be hard to access. For a system, like a collapsing star, there is a lot of information. …Thanks to Hawking, we know that it forms a black hole and then slowly evaporates, emitting radiation. The information that was contained in the initial star has been reduced to just the temperature of a warm body. Hawking argued that the information was simply lost. Quantum mechanics, he asserted, breaks down near black holes.Many leading theorists have struggled to resolve the puzzles raised by this thought experiment. Some have argued that, one has to redo quantum mechanics or general relativity to resolve Hawking’s paradox. Others have been more sceptical. Perhaps, the evaporation of a black hole is like a lump of ash from the burning of a log. Surely, the laws of quantum mechanics don’t break down when an object burns? In that case, the resolution of the puzzle is that the outgoing radiation is not exactly that of a black body because subtle connections between the outgoing photons remain intact. But it was soon realised that the answer could not be so simple; the structure of space and time makes it hard to understand how such correlations might arise. … Perhaps Hawking was right: just as Newtonian physics was usurped by quantum mechanics and general relativity on large or tiny scales, something had to give here as well.It turns out that there is a situation where black holes could exist and quantum mechanics could make sense: string theory. String theory, also emerging from thought experiments, replaces the particles of quantum mechanics with one-dimensional strings. That concept has provided at least a partial resolution of the puzzle. Two theorists at Harvard University – Cumrun Vafa and Andrew Strominger were able to understand the temperature of certain idealised black holes in quantum mechanical terms. In other words, the information, at least for these idealised systems, somehow survives, evading Hawking’s paradox.
The ‘Black Hole’ theory waspropounded by [UPPCS (Mains) 2016UPPCS (Pre) 1996](A) C.V. Raman(B) H.J. Bhabha(C) S. Chandrashekhar(D) Hargovind Khurana8. A ‘black hole’ is a body in spacewhich does not allow any typeof radiation to come out. Thisproperty is due to its [IAS (Pre) 2000](A) Very small size(B) Very large size(C) High density(D) Very low density9. The terms ‘Event Horizon’,‘Singularity’, ‘String Theory’ and‘Standard Model’ are sometimesseen in the news in the context of[IAS (Pre) 2017](A) Observation and understandingof the Universe(B) Study of the solar and the lunareclipses(C) Placing satellites in the orbit ofthe Earth(D) Origin and evolution of livingorganisms on the Earth10. ‘Super Nova’ is[UP Lower Sub. (Mains) 2015](A) An asteroid (B) A black hole(C) A comet (D) A dyning star11. How many constellations are in ourSpace? [44th BPSC (Pre) 2000](A) 87 (B) 88(C) 89 (D) 9012. Which one of the following is not anAstronomical object?[UPPCS (Pre) 1996IAS (Pre) 1993](A) Pulsar (B) Brittle star(C) Black hole (D) Quasar13. A group of stars arranged in aparticular shape, is called[UPPCS (Pre) 2013](A) Milky Way (B) Constellation(C) Andromeda (D) Solar system
How does Stephen hawkings explain the singularity
The ‘Black Hole’ theory waspropounded by
What can we detect from matter that has crossed an event horizon?Group of answer choicesVisible light.Gamma bursts.Radio waves if the matter was traveling fast enough.X-rays if the matter was dense.Nothing.
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