
Q: Can scientists create a black hole in a laboratory? What would it take to create a black hole in a lab?
Teodor, Bucharest, Romania
A: This, the second of a three-part article, tells how to create a black hole in the lab. It is difficult. We can't make a black hole in the world we know, because no collider can smash mass into a small enough space. The resulting density has to be the so-called Planck's value of 10^97 kilograms per cubic meter — which man cannot achieve.
Exploding stars can, but we're talking about a man-made lab — a collider that smashes protons together at near light speeds. Our puny efforts don't come close: a density of about 10^34 kilograms per cubic meter is about the best we can do, and that only in 2008 when the Swiss upgrade the Large Hadron Collider (HLC)*.
But what if the Universe is different? Maybe the Planck value would be smaller, in that case. Maybe, then, man could generate the needed energies. No maybes about it! Given an extra, nicely warped dimension, we can do it. Here's how.
Suppose the real Universe has a Space with four dimensions (or more). Furthermore, suppose the extra dimension warps gravity, so that gravity becomes huge in the extra dimension of Space. (I'll explain warped dimensions next week.)
Then the Planck value shrinks into a black-hole density the LHC can produce. In fact, the upgraded LHC may be able to crank out a micro black hole each second. Such a black hole's lifetime is only about ten trillion trillionths of a second (10^-27 seconds). In that brief instant, however, we can tell if a black hole was born, because it dies a wild death. According to Stephen Hawking (http://www.hawking.org.uk/home/hindex.html), the dying micro hole will spew hordes of very-high energy particles in all directions. If we see an imprint of such radiation, then we will know the Universe is a far stranger place than the one our senses detect. One in which we can create black holes in the lab.
Well, I've run out of room, again. Next week, I shall continue the story of Space's extra dimensions and making black holes in the lab.
* A brief note on sizes: 10 ^-23 is 10 divided by a trillion trillion, a very small number. 10^34 is almost a trillion trillion trillion, a very large number.
Further Reading:
Making black holes in the lab, Part 1, WonderQuest
How black holes trap light, WonderQuest
How black holes die, WonderQuest
Tracking black holes — do they exist? WonderQuest
Fermilab at Work, Fermilab
How do physicists study particles, CERN
Black holes at Future Colliders and Beyond by Greg Landsberg, Brown University
Warped Passages: unraveling the mysteries of the universe's hidden dimensions by Lisa Randall, Harvard University
Quantum black holes, Scientific American
The Charm of Strange Quarks: Mysteries and Revolutions of Particle Physics
(Answered June 18, 2007)