Affiliation:
1. Escuela de Fisica, Univ. Aut. de Zacatecas, Apartado Postal C-580, Zacatecas, ZAC 98068, Mexico
Abstract
Atoms and the planets acquire their stability from the quantum mechanical incompatibility of the position and momentum measurements. This incompatibility is expressed by the fundamental commutator [x, px]=iℏ, or equivalently, via the Heisenberg's uncertainty principle Δx Δ px~ℏ. A further stability-related phenomenon where the quantum realm plays a dramatic role is the collapse of certain stars into white dwarfs and neutron stars. Here, an intervention of the Pauli exclusion principle, via the fermionic degenerate pressure, stops the gravitational collapse. However, by the neutron-star stage the standard quantum realm runs dry. One is left with the problematic collapse of a black hole. This essay is devoted to a concrete argument on why the black-hole spacetime itself should exhibit a quantum nature. The proposed quantum aspect of spacetime is shown to prevent the general-relativistic dictated problematic collapse. The quantum nature of black-hole spacetime is deciphered from a recent result on the universal equal-area spacing [Formula: see text] for black holes. In one interpretation of the emergent picture, an astrophysical black hole can fluctuate to [Formula: see text] time its classical size, and thus allow radiation and matter to escape to the outside observers. These fluctuations I conjecture provide a new source, perhaps beyond Hawking radiation, of intense radiation from astrophysical black holes and may be the primary source of observed radiation from those galactic cores what carry black hole(s). The presented interpretation may be used as a criterion to choose black holes from black hole candidates.
Publisher
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics,Mathematical Physics
Cited by
14 articles.
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