http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/fuzzball_blackholes_040301.html

Black holes may not be the smooth, featureless gravitational gluttons
long thought to completely devour any matter or information that
strays too close.

According to a new study, information may continue to exist long after
entering a black hole, preserved in a giant tangle of strings that
stretch from the hole's core to its surface, giving it more of a
"fuzzball" appearance than that of a smooth gravitational beast.

"I think that most people gave up on the idea that information was
destroyed once the idea of string theory rose to prominence in 1995,"
said Samir Mathur, an Ohio State physics professor and the leader of
the recent study. "It�s just that nobody has been able to prove that
the information survives before now."

The research appears in the March 1 issue of the journal Nuclear
Physics B.

The debate over whether information could still exist after falling
into a black hole has been around for years. Famed scientists Stephen
Hawking, Kip Thorne and John Preskill even made a bet as to whether
information that enters a black hole ceases to exist -- that is,
whether the interior of a black hole is changed at all by the
characteristics of particles that enter it. Hawking�s research
suggested that the particles have no effect whatsoever. But his theory
violated the laws of quantum mechanics and created a contradiction
known as the "information paradox."

In the classical model of how black holes form, a supermassive object,
such as a giant star, collapses to form a very small point of infinite
gravity, called a singularity. A special region in space surrounds the
singularity, and any object that crosses the region�s border, known as
the event horizon, is pulled into the black hole, never to return.

In theory, not even light can escape from a black hole.

The diameter of the event horizon depends on the mass of the object
that formed it. For instance, if the sun collapsed into a singularity,
its event horizon would measure approximately 3 kilometers (1.9 miles)
across. If Earth followed suit, its event horizon would only measure 1
centimeter (0.4 inches).

As to what lies in the region between a singularity and its event
horizon, physicists have always drawn a blank, literally. No matter
what type of material formed the singularity, the area inside the
event horizon was supposed to be devoid of any structure or measurable
characteristics.

And therein lies the problem.

"The problem with the classical theory is that you could use any
combination of particles to make the black hole -- protons, electrons,
stars, planets, whatever -- and it would make no difference. There
must be billions of ways to make a black hole, yet with the classical
model the final state of the system is always the same," Mathur said.

That kind of uniformity violates the quantum mechanical law of
reversibility, he explained. Physicists must be able to trace the end
product of any process, including the process that makes a black hole,
back to the conditions that created it.

If all black holes are the same, then no black hole can be traced back
to its unique beginning, and any information about the particles that
created it is lost forever at the moment the hole forms.

"Nobody really believes that now, but nobody could ever find anything
wrong with the classical argument, either," Mathur said. "We can now
propose what went wrong."

In 2000, string theorists named the information paradox number eight
on their top-ten list of physics problems to be solved during the next
millennium. That list included questions such as "what is the lifetime
of a proton?" and "how can quantum gravity help explain the origin of
the universe?"

Mathur began working on the information paradox when he was an
assistant professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and
he attacked the problem full time after joining the Ohio State faculty
in 2000.

With postdoctoral researcher Oleg Lunin, Mathur computed the structure
of objects that lie in-between simple string states and large
classical black holes. Instead of being tiny objects, they turned out
to be large. Recently, he and two doctoral students -- Ashish Saxena
and Yogesh Srivastava -- found that the same picture of a "fuzzball"
continued to hold true for objects more closely resembling a classic
black hole. Those new results appear in Nuclear Physics B.

According to string theory, all the fundamental particles of the
universe -- protons, neutrons, and electrons -- are made of different
combinations of strings. But as tiny as strings are, Mathur believes
they can form large black holes through a phenomenon called fractional
tension.

Strings are stretchable, he said, but each carries a certain amount of
tension, as does a guitar string. With fractional tension, the tension
decreases as the string gets longer.

Just as a long guitar string is easier to pluck than a short guitar
string, a long strand of quantum mechanical strings joined together is
easier to stretch than a single string, Mathur said.

So when a great many strings join together, as they would in order to
form the many particles necessary for a very massive object like a
black hole, the combined ball of string is very stretchy, and expands
to a wide diameter.

When the Ohio State physicists derived their formula for the diameter
of a fuzzy black hole made of strings, they found that it matched the
diameter of the black hole event horizon suggested by the classical
model.

Since Mathur�s conjecture suggests that strings continue to exist
inside the black hole, and the nature of the strings depends on the
particles that made up the original source material, then each black
hole is as unique as are the stars, planets, or galaxy that formed it.
The strings from any subsequent material that enters the black hole
would remain traceable as well.

That means a black hole can be traced back to its original conditions,
and information survives.



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