Title: The Calculus of Black Holes
1The Calculus of Black Holes
- James Wang
- Elizabeth Lee
- Alina Leung
- Elizabeth Klinger
2What is a Black Hole?
- A region from which even light cannot escape
- Thus the black hole itself cannot be seen
- Detected through gravitational distortion of
nearby planets and stars, and radiation - Has infinite gravitational pull and density
3What is the Event Horizon?
- An area around the singularity of the black hole
where no particle can escape its pull - No outside influences can affect the particles
descent towards the black hole
4What are Stationary Limits?
- Stationary limit area around black hole (outer
border) - Particles in area are in constant motion
- Rotating black hole (Kerrs) distortion of
space - Doesnt apply to Schwarzchild black hole
doesnt rotate - Gravity infinitely intense
- Limit between this and event horizon ergosphere
- Limit at which light can escape
5Diagram of a Black Hole
6Pictures of Black Holes
7How are Black Holes Modeled?
- Black holes create indentations in space/time
continuum - Curvature is the only logical way to model black
holes - Black holes follow the no-hair theorem
- Only three characteristics distinguishing black
holes from one another are mass, angular
momentum, and electric charge
8Black Holes and Einsteins Theory of Relativity
Black Holes and Einsteins General Theory of
Relativity
- Gravity curved space time
- Caused by mass and radius of an object, as well
as energy - Strong gravitational field more curvature
- Applies to light light gets curved
- Space affects movement of object
- No material object can move faster than speed of
light - Black hole area where space time curved so much
that objects fall out of the universe - Escape velocity speed of light
9Maxwells Equations
- Determines total flow of electric charge out from
closed surface - Cover surface with patches of area of dA
(represented as vectors), use dot product to find
component of field that points in outward
direction (only component that matters)
- Net magnetic flux is 0
- Magnetic flux product of magnetic field and
area it goes through integral of vector quantity
(magnetic force) over surface
10Maxwells Equations (contd)
- Line integral products of vector functions of
electric and magnetic field - Equation says line integral of electric field
around closed loop is equal to negative rate of
change of magnetic flux
11Maxwells Equations (contd)
- Light was in form of electromagnetic wave
12How are Maxwells Equations Related to Black
Holes?
- Moving electric field creates magnetic vortex
- Electromagnetic radiation from charged
particles that move towards black hole - Light affected by extremely strong gravity
- Black hole is large magnetic field b/c electric
field created when charge falls into black hole
13Using Riemannian Manifolds to Describe Curvature
- Manifolds describe complex structures of
non-Euclidian space within the context of
Euclidian space using mathematical equations - Riemannian manifolds are real differentiable
manifolds that use angles - Black holes are mapped into more simple
structures using Riemannian manifolds
14Equations Modeling Black Hole Curvature
The Schwarzschild Metric Equation
15Equations Modeling Black Hole Curvature
The Schwarzschild Metric Equation (Continued)
16Equations for Escape Velocity and Gravitational
Force
- Gravitational Energy would have to equal kinetic
energy
- Force as mass becomes infinite and radius 0
17Significance of Change in Radius in Relation to
Curvature
- Curvature is the deviation of an object from
being flat - A smaller radius has more curvature and vice
versa - Therefore, black holes with smaller radii have
more curvature
18Behavior and Emissions of a Black Hole
- Electromagnetic radiation comes from charged
particles that move towards black hole - Black hole is large magnetic field b/c electric
field created when charge falls into black hole
19Photon and Gamma Particle Radiation from Black
Holes
- Black holes emit thermal radiation at temperature
-
- reduced Planck constant
- c speed of light
- K Boltzmann constant
- G gravitational constant
- M mass of black hole
- Unlike most objects, the temperature of a black
hole increases as it radiates away mass
20Gravitational Force Considerations
- Black holes become impossible to escape as it
approaches the event horizon as the escape
velocity required, regardless of mass, equals the
speed of light - Relativity, as c is constant, in order for energy
to increase towards infinite, mass infinite
21Bibliography
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24Bibliography continued
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