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Neutrinos are noted to rarely interact with matter and mostly pass through the Earth without interacting. But how about a neutron star?
Could they pass thru a black hole star?
Nothing escapes a black hole, which is not a star, nor even a location in coordinate space.
Perhaps a related question - would hypothetical gravitons be absorbed by a black hole?- If a black hole is (say) 10km across- And the gravitational waves have a wavelength of (say) 30,000km?I expect that wavefunction of the gravitons allow you to calculate the probability that a particular graviton is found at a particular point in space- There is a finite probability that an individual graviton will impact the event horizon of the black hole- Since there are so many gravitons in a gravitational wave, some of them will impact the event horizon, and be absorbed.The same argument applies to photons in an electromagnetic wave with a wavelength of 30,000km.
Perhaps a related question - would hypothetical gravitons be absorbed by a black hole?
I expect that wavefunction of the gravitons allow you to calculate the probability that a particular graviton is found at a particular point in space- There is a finite probability that an individual graviton will impact the event horizon of the black hole
How might we (in theory) detect that a graviton had interacted with the actual singularity** of a black hole?
Could the probability of such an occurrence exceed by very many orders the lifetime of the universe and so be considered impossible?
** are singularities mathematical objects without a physical counterpart?
Einstein's attitude to mathematical singularities was that since no physical property can really be infinite, his theory becomes inapplicable at that point.
Going back to your (Evan-au) idea of there being a finite probability that the graviton is found located right on the event horizon - well not necessarily. The event horizon location may be a node of the wave function. Perhaps there is always 0 probability of finding it at the region of space previously described as the event horizon, instead it will always be found somewhere outside the event horizon. In simpler quantum mechanics you might have seen the wave function that is described as modelling a "particle in a box" or a particle inside a square potential well where the potential reaches infinity outside the box. Those wave functions are such that the amplitude is constrained to be 0 at the edges of the box, so the particle is never found right on the edge of the box.
The terminology was stolen from the mathematicians.
Yes but human beings are biased into thinking that everything that seems like a point in space must actually be a point in space. When Schwarzschild found his solution of the E.F.E. for the situation where there is spherical symmetry and empty space in all regions for r>0 *(see note), it was soon realised that there wasn't any manifold that could be extended to include the point r=0.
But R > 0 for a black hole
Elsewhere, you have been discussing a travelling particle modelled as a wave packet and in this situation the behaviour of the packet (and hence probability of finding the particle) is not zero at the barrier.
it’s difficult to even guess whether a theory of quantum gravity would resolve the problem
Quote from: alancalverd on Yesterday at 10:45:27But R > 0 for a black hole Why and with what guarantee can you say that?
Yes but human beings are biased into thinking that everything that seems like a point in space must actually be a point in space.
*LATE EDITING: The Schwarzschild solution applies for r > R where R = the radius of some mass that is the source of gravitation. Black holes arise where R < Schwarzschild radius. For Schwarzschild black holes the metric is assumed to be valid for all r >0. There is simply no way to encapsulate all of this in a short sentence. It's just easier to say that Schwarzschild considered r>0 even though historically it started with r>R.
Wikipedia lists the categories of black holes with their mass and Schwarzchild radii. It is reasonable to assume spherical or at least axial symmetry from there inwards.
This makes it sound like there's a spatial ball in there. R is a timelike worldline inside the event horizon. Positing that there's a mass inside with nonzero radius R is to suggest that something cannot move to the future because the future is full.
until we observe a BH with an asymmetric EH