Typically, one imagines a black hole as sort of a gigantic cosmic pit that sucks in everything around it. But physicists say a new kind of space structure is possible that allows some information to escape black holes. Previously, wormholes, theoretical structures predicted by the theory of general relativity (as Einstein-Rosen bridges), have been considered as possible ways to escape black holes.
But the physics of such
potential tunnels between locations in space-time never panned out. The
wormholes would collapse immediately upon forming. So scientists theorized that
may be some advanced civilization could find a technology, perhaps utilizing an
exotic material to stabilize the wormholes. Basically, pure sci-fi.
But now, physicists proposed
that a new type of wormhole is possible, called traversable. It
would be be free of exotic material and could stay open on its own.
The work on traversable
wormholes was carried out by Ping Gao and Daniel
Jafferies of Harvard University and Aron Wall of
Stanford University. According to their 2016 paper, a
repulsive negative energy can be generated by a special quantum connection
between the black holes on both sides of the wormhole. With the right kind of
connection, something could go from being in one black hole into the other one.
If this kind of wormhole is
possible, it means there could be interiors to black holes and that you could
theoretically get out of one and live to tell about it. Interestingly, the math
involved in the work by the physicists on the wormholes is similar to the
process called quantum teleportation, which can be demonstrated in a lab.
Here's how a traversable
wormhole would work, in a graphic from Quanta Magazine:
In case you're wondering,
traversable wormholes do not seem to function as time machines. Rather they
support the concept of unitarity - that no information is ever
lost. As John Preskill, a black hole expert from Caltech noted to Quanta Magazine, the new wormholes also protect “what we
call ‘black hole complementarity,’ which means that the interior and exterior
of the black hole are not really two different systems but rather two very
different, complementary ways of looking at the same system."
Traversable wormholes were
further explored in a recent paper co-authored by Juan Maldacena,
Douglas Stanford, and Zhenbin Yang.
It bears noting that no
actual wormholes have been discovered yet. This article was first published on
BigThink.
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