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The Black Hole War: My Battle With Stephen Hawking to Make the World Safe for Quantum Mechanics PDF

455 Pages·2008·43.99 MB·English
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"Susskind does a masterful job of translating the incredible com plexity of general relativity, quantum physics, string theory, and black hole theory into a cheerful romp through the worlds of the very big and the very small." -Sheila Jones, Toronto Globe and Mail "Susskind does a terrific job across an astonishing range, from Ein stein's work in relativity to the laws of thermodynamics to the fan tastical ideas behind string theory in cosmology. When the debate finally ends, the reader has gotten some rather entertaining insights into the world of physics and a very nice grounding in the science." - Deborah Blum, Minneapolis Star-Tribune "The Black Hole War charts the ups and downs of this lengthy yet good-natured dispute. Susskind skillfully explains the subtleties of the physics that underlie the issue, and includes anecdotes to en liven the technical details." - Paul Davies, Nature "Susskind is very down to earth, an easygoing and entertaining guide through the most exciting frontiers of theoretical physics." - Aman~a Gefter, New Scientist "Susskind shares Richard Feynman's gift for spinning fascinating anecdotes. ... The Black Hole War succeeds on two levels: as an en gaging memoir by a skilled storyteller; and as a compelling intro duction to some elusive but captivating scientific ideas." - John Preskill, Physics World "A mind-bender. ... This is your universe on acid .... Susskind ex plains this dizzying notion about as clearly as is probably possible." -George Johnson, New York Times Book Re iew "Susskind is famous for his wit and storytelling abilities. ... The Black Hole War will richly reward anyone who takes the time to ponder the intricacies of its themes." - Sean Carroll, Wall Street Journal THE BLACK HOLE WAR MY BATTLE WITH STEPHEN HAWKING TO MAKE THE WORLD SAFE FOR QUANTUM MECHANICS Leonard Susskind BACK BAY BOOKS I.JTTtE, RROWN ANO COMPANY New York -'' Boston ,_..., London ALSO BY LEONARD SUSSKIND The Cosmic Landscape: String Theory and the Illusion of Intelligent Design Copyright © 2008 by Leonard Susskind All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Back Bay Books I Little, Brown and Company Hachette Book Group 237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017 www.hachettebookgroup.com Originally published in hardcover by Little, Brown and Company, July 2008 First Back Bay paperback edition,July2009 Back Bay Books is an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. The Back Bay Books name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc. lllustration of Trinity College, Cambridge, on page 273 © 1996 by Jeremy Bays. www.art-work-shop.co.uk. Photograph on page 284 courtesy of the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences. M. C. Escher's Circle Limit IV in chapter 22 © 2008The M. C. Escher Company-Holland. All rights reserved. www.mcescher.com. Please address physics questions to Susskind's Blog: Physics for Everyone, http:/lsusskindsblogphysicsforeveryone.blogspot.coml. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Susskind, Leonard. The black hole war :my battle with Stephen Hawking to make the world safe for quantum mechanics I Leonard Susskind.-1st ed. p. em. Includes index. ISBN 978-0-316-01640-7 (he) I 978-0-316-01641-4 (pb) 1. Quantum theory. 2. General relativity (Physics). 3. Black holes (Astronomy). 4. Space and time. 5. Hawking, S. W. (Stephen W.). L Title. QC174.12.S896 2008 530.12-dc22 2007048355 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 RRD-IN Printed in the United States of America What is it that breathes fire into the equations and makes a universe for them to describe? - STEPHEN HAWKING CONTENTS Introduction 3 Part I The Gathering Storm 1 The First Shot 17 ' The Dark Star 25 3 Not Your Grandfather's Geometry 50 4 "Einstein, Don't Tell God What to Do" 76 5 Planck In vents a Better Yardstick 111 6 In a Broadway Bar 117 7 Energy and Entropy 126 8 Wheeler's Boys, or How Much Information Can You Stuff in a Black Hole? 143 9 Black Light 157 Part II Surprise AHack lC How Stephen Lost His Bits and Didn't Know Where to Find Them 179 . viii CONTENTS 11 The Dutch Resistance 193 12 Who Cares? 200 13 Stalemate 211 14 Skirmish at Aspen 225 Part Ill CounteraHack 15 The Battle of Santa Barbara 233 16 Wait! Reverse the Rewiring 265 17 Ahab in Cambridge 271 18 The World as a Hologram 290 Part IV Closing the Ring 19 Weapon of Mass Deduction 309 20 Alice's Airplane, or The Last Visible Propeller 354 21 Counting Black Holes 366 22 South America Wins the War 395 23 Nuclear Physics? You're Kidding! 422 24 Humility 433 Epilogue 442 Acknowledgments 449 Glossary 451 Index 457 THE BLACK HOLE WAR INTRODUCTION There was so much to grok, so little to grok from. -ROBERT A. HEINLEIN, STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND omewhere on the East African savanna, an aging lion spies her intended dinner. She prefers older, slower victims, but the young, healthy antelope is her only choice. The wary eyes of the prey are placed on the side of his head, ideally suited for scouring the landscape in search of dangerous predators. The pred ator's eyes look straight ahead, perfect for locking onto her victim and gauging the distance. This time the antelope's wide-angle scanners miss the predator, and he wanders within striking range. The powerful rear legs of the lion thrust her forward toward the panicked victim. The timeless race begins anew. Though burdened by age, the big cat is the superior sprinter. At first the gap closes, but the lion's powerful fast-twitch muscles grad ually give way to oxygen deplivation. Soon the antelope's natural endurance wins out, and at some point the relative velocity of the cat and her prey switches sign; the closing gap begins to open. The moment she senses this reversal of fortune, Her Royal Highness is defeated. She slinks back into the underbrush. 4 THE BlACK HOLE WAR Fifty thousand years ago, a tired hunter spots a cave opening blocked by a boulder: a safe place to rest if he can move the heavy obstruc tion. Unlike his apish forebears, the hunter stands upright. In that straight-up posture, he pushes mightily against the boulder, but nothing happens. To get a better angle, the hunter places his feet at a greater distance from the rock. When his body is almost horizon tal, the applied force has a much larger component in the right di rection. The boulder moves. Distance? Velocity? Change of sign? Angle? Force? Component? What incredibly sophisticated calculations took place in the untu tored brain of the hunter, let alone the cat? These are technical con cepts that one ordina1ily first meets in college physics textbooks. Where did the cat learn to gauge not only the velocity of its prey but also, more important, the relative velocity? Did the hunter take a physics course to learn the concept of force? And trigonometry to reckon the sines and cosines for computing components? The truth, of course, is that all complex life-forms have built-in, instinctive physics concepts that have been hardwired into their nervous systems by evolution.1 Without this preprogrammed phys ics software, survival would be impossible. Mutation and natural se lection have made us all physicists, even animals. In humans the large size of the brain has allowed these instincts to evolve into con cepts that we carry at the conscious level. I. No one really knows how much is hardwil"Cd and how much is learned in early life, but the distinction is not important here. The point is that by the time our nervous systems are mature, experience, of either the personal or the evolutionary kind, has given us a lot of instinctual knowledge of how the physical world behaves. Whether hardwired or learned at a very young age, the knowledge is very difficult to unlearn.

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What happens when something is sucked into a black hole? Does it disappear? Three decades ago, a young physicist named Stephen Hawking claimed it did-and in doing so put at risk everything we know about physics and the fundamental laws of the universe. Most scientists didn't recognize the import of
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