Ologies with Alie Ward - Black Hole Theory Cosmology (WHAT ARE BLACK HOLES?!) Part 1 with Ronald Gamble, Jr.
Episode Date: February 21, 2024How big are black holes? Is time elastic? What is spacetime foam? Why is there a place called “elsewhere?” Enjoy this dazzling two-parter that starts with the absolute basics with NASA’s Goddard... Theoretical Astrophysicist and Black Hole Theory Cosmologist Dr. Ronald Gamble, Jr. We talk busting of flim-flam, how do we image them, what's the most giant dense book you can buy about them, where do trad goths fit into this episode, does my dog exist, how astrophysics is like drawing, and the greatest gift he could give his mom. Also what you have in common with an annulus. Visit Dr. Ronald Gamble’s website and follow him on Instagram, X, and Google ScholarMore episode sources and linksSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesOther episodes you may enjoy: Scotohylology (DARK MATTER), Cosmology (THE UNIVERSE), Quantum Ontology (WHAT IS REAL?), Abstract Mathematology (UH, IS MATH REAL?), Futurology (THE FUTURE), Eschatology (THE APOCALYPSE), Radiology (X-RAY VISION), Invisible Photology (INVISIBILITY CLOAKS)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes!Follow @Ologies on Instagram and XFollow @AlieWard on Instagram and XEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio ProductionsManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek and The WordaryWebsite by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
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Oh, hey, it's your friend's dog with the snaggle tooth, Allie Ward.
We're gonna take a deep breath, all right?
We got this.
We got it.
And let's get illuminated on the topic of black holes, shall we?
So this oligist is a theoretical astrophysicist and a cosmic origins scientist in the Astrophysics
Science Division at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
And he got his bachelors in physics, a master's in condensed matter physics,
and that deals with how matter arises.
And then he just topped off those degrees
with a casual PhD in theoretical astrophysics
at North Carolina Agricultural
and Technical State University.
So we were introduced by Oluji's fan favorite guest.
You love her, Dr. Raven the Science Maven Baxter.
And I trust her taste in everything.
So I asked this NASA scientist to please meet me the next time he was in LA and
be prepared to steal himself for questions that a six-year-old might ask about,
what is a black hole?
He obliged and explained things so well, we're all gonna learn enough to impress
at least an eight-year-old.
But also maybe the people who work in our office who are going to think that we're geniuses.
So he showed up. He was wearing the coolest boots I've ever seen. They're this dressy,
above the ankle with embroidered gold floral motifs. And we headed into my home studio with
two cups of tea and a small goblin named my dog. But before we get into it, thank you so much to everyone at patreon.com
slash oligies who submitted questions about wormholes
and dimensions and the singularity
in so many terms that we're gonna talk about.
You too can be a patron.
You can submit questions for me to read
alongside your name.
And thank you to everyone wearing our art
on your bodies at oligiesmerch.com.
And of course, you can support the show and just get it in more ears just by rating and leaving us a review.
I read them every week such as this hot one from THVCHFDVBJFVG,
who I think that was just fingers dancing on a keyboard.
But they said, hit and run, more like hit and fun.
And explained, yesterday I was rear-ended while driving home from work and listening
toologies.
And as I waited for four hours for an officer to make a police report on the side of a busy
highway, Ali and her guests guided me through amazing topics and helped me calm down with
fun and learning.
I was even able to laugh during what was a stressful situation.
Oh, THVCHFDVBJFVG, that sucks. That sucks so bad. Not for
me though, because that was a nice review. Okay, so the ology for this one is black hole
theory cosmology, and it's a lot of words, but it's heavy stuff because a black hole,
it's a spot in the universe where gravity and space and time go hog wild. Things go
bonkers. And it's so strong, nothing can wrestle from it,
not even light.
Or you.
So where are they?
What are they?
What's at the center of them?
I don't know.
But this guest does and is going to fill us in.
So get ready for a dazzling two-parter that starts with the 101 of Black Holes.
Absolute basics, busting of flim flam.
The major players in the history of theories.
What happens when they
collide? How do we image them? What's the most giant dense book you can buy about them? Where do
trad goths fit into this episode? Does my dog exist? How many of me are they? The hows and how
many of black holes? How astrophysics is like drawing and the greatest gift that he could give
his mom with theoretical astrophysicist
and black hole theory cosmologist, Dr. Ronald Gamble, he, him, his.
All right, let's get into it.
My work is entirely focused on the theory of black holes.
So a lot of people work on just observing them and they're really looking at the matter
around a black hole.
I'm like, no.
What is a black hole?
How can we move or what? How can we get to one? Maybe. What's the theory around it? What's the math? Can I make new math to study a black hole? Do I need new math?
Do I need to break my brain to study this? Of course, you mentioned cosmology. And that's a more kind of larger scale.
Kind of like esoterical almost.
What's our place in the universe?
Where the universe come from?
How many black holes are there?
Was there a black hole at the beginning of the universe?
Is there going to be a black hole at the end of the universe?
Who knows?
But nobody panicked, because that's a very long, long way away.
What about, is there one in the middle of most solar systems?
Let's pull back.
Where exactly are we and what's in the center of the galaxy, our galaxy?
So if you look at the map of a Milky Way, right, the Milky Way is a spiral galaxy.
If you look at the arms of the spiral galaxy and you go kind of a little, maybe a third out, that's where the solar system is.
So we're in like a very sweet spot in the galaxy.
Earth is in a sweet spot in the solar system.
We are like perfectly placed.
And just in case you're blanking,
as far as we know, there's one universe,
in that universe are up to two trillion galaxies. And the Milky Way is just
one of those two trillion. And in the Milky Way, there are about a hundred billion stars,
including our one little sun around which your planet revolves. So we're up here, we're
worried about things like nose hairs and how many likes our baby and ask my God while living a very short life on a tiny speck on a pinwheel arm of a
spiral galaxy our old Milky Way. But at the center of the galaxy is a supermassive black hole
so supermassive meaning it's at least a billion times
the mass of our Sun. Oh my god. See as you think a billion Suns
that is the mass of that black hole,
and it's called Sagittarius A star, so now we named it,
that's at the center of our galaxy.
And so we've been studying it for a long, long time.
Do we know any more than a few numbers?
No.
We still need theory about it.
But it's a very interesting object to think,
you know, over a million, billion years, we're going a very interesting object to think.
You know, over a million billion years,
we're gonna fall into a black hole.
Is it sucking things in as a ghost?
Is that why it's a spiral?
Is it like a toilet going down?
It depends on how the galaxy evolved.
So you have many different types of galaxies,
and I don't wanna go into the galaxyology here.
But you have spiral galaxies, you have elliptical galaxies, you have globular galaxies.
They're kind of irregular.
And that is just how the stars, planets, rocks, dust, kind of a creed around the central
object that's pulling them all in due to gravity.
Could be a black hole, could be a larger, smaller galaxy at the center.
Sometimes it is.
Most of the time it's a black hole.
Because that's the only thing strong enough
that can actually pull and hold a galaxy together.
And then you have dark matter that's kind of
squeezing everything in and holding a lot of things in place.
And for more on specifically dark matter,
you can see our scoto-hyalology episode
with Dr. Flip Tenedo to learn more about how it's everywhere,
but we can't see it.
We don't know what it does.
Maybe you're a ghost.
We talk about that.
So do we know the connection between dark matter and dark energy and black holes?
Not yet.
Okay.
Come back and I'll tell you 15 years, 20, 50 years, I don't know.
Just a quick question.
What is gravity?
Where is it coming from?
Good question.
So if I have flat spacetime, OK, we are talking about curvature
now.
OK.
So now we're talking about spacetime curvature.
That is the strength of gravity, right?
So gravity in and of itself is the curvature of spacetime.
It is a force.
It's one of the four fundamental forces. Electromagnetism, the strong and weak nuclear force, The unit of itself is the curvature of spacetime. It is a force.
It's one of the four fundamental forces, electromagnetism, the strong and weak nuclear
force, and then there's gravity.
Gravity is always the one that eludes us, because we still don't know how it behaves
entirely.
But we're going back to this flat sheet.
If there's no gravity, spacetime is flat.
As soon as I place anything with mass or energy, space time curves.
And that creates gravity.
So mass is mass, but gravity is space time bending to that mass.
And we'll talk about space time in a bit.
But imagine a wire frame or a grid and it's stretching and warping around mass and energy.
Aha.
Now, how can I curve space-time? Do I just need a static object just sitting there?
Yeah, it'll sit there or it could spin.
What happens if it spins?
Well, you're creating more gravity.
Why is the spinning creating more gravity?
It's because you're creating more gravity. Why is the spinning creating more gravity?
Because you're curving space-time.
Oh, because it's spinning, so it's deforming space-time a little bit more.
Not only that, but if I spin faster, I'm getting more energy.
So I'm curving space-time more.
So I have more gravity, right?
So again, how else can you curve something?
Are donuts curved?
Yeah, but they have a hole in the center.
So if I have something that's at the very center, right,
and it's like a ball or a black hole,
and it's curving space-time, we have gravity,
but what if I also have something that's on the edge,
but it's more shaped like a donut or a disc
with a hole in the center?
We call that an annulus, but okay.
Donuts, anyone?
Just a side note, when you see an eclipse
and there's a glowing ring, like a halo from the sun
around the silhouette of the moon,
that's also called an annulus.
An annulus comes from the root word for ring.
And yeah, an annulus is related to the other hole
that sounds like it that you're thinking about.
Disc hole for now.
And that has mass energy and it's rotating.
Does that create gravity?
Yeah.
Now, if I keep going further and further out,
observations tell me, hey, there's this extra
mass that's sitting on the edge of galaxies.
What the hell is that?
Dark matter.
Is dark matter creating gravity?
Yes.
A lot of it or a little of it or all of it?
Enough to keep... It creates enough of effect or enough force, right?
To keep the galaxy spinning faster than it should at the edge.
Now, does dark matter have gravity?
Yeah, it only interacts with gravity.
And nothing else is why we can't see it.
Are dark matter and dark energy and black holes made of the same thing? I have
no idea.
Oh.
Cliffhanger.
Interesting. Oh my gosh. Love it, Cliffhanger. Okay, so do you think black holes then is
one of the theories that black holes predated galaxies because they just started sucking
in matter and then that's
kind of what made the galaxy gather there.
That's kind of what's going on.
Yeah.
So the term there, and I'm just going to try to keep it super basic, is a creating matter.
So we're talking about a creating matter.
We're talking about the black hole pulling things in and at the same time, if you pull
something in and you're self-gravitating, you have a likelihood to rotate.
So you're not only pulling things in,
but you're also rotating around.
So it kind of creates that spiral look,
that spiral geometry.
But if you do it over millions and billions of years,
then you're gonna get more matter, more stars, planets.
There are smaller nebula, there are smaller systems inside the disks of galaxies.
And a nebula is this huge blob of dust and gases.
And part of your body and your brain might be made up
from stars that were made in a nebula.
And no, I can't really handle that.
But yeah, a black hole, a creeds and draws
in all kinds of things like planets and stars
and nebulae
and your car keys and my sandwich.
So you can imagine like stellar mass black holes, which are black holes the size of our
sun in the disk around a supermassive black hole.
And there could be a thousand of them there.
Because they are the size of stars.
How many stars are in the Milky Way?
Couple 100 billion.
So you can imagine, well, there's probably some black holes there.
Yeah.
Falling into another black hole. Falling into another black hole.
That's a much larger black hole.
So a supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy.
But then sprinkled in there a bunch of sun-sized black holes.
Just dark voids that light and matter can't get out of.
And I had a difficult time processing this,
and I think I may have dissociated for a moment.
So now it's like, yeah, your face.
Yeah, yeah. What the hell?
Can black holes be tiny and in our solar system?
Like, is there a possibility that there's little pinpoints
of black holes here and there around us
or are black holes only gigantic?
Short answer, and I have to say this is no.
Okay.
Long answer is yes.
Okay.
But we call them primordial black holes.
What do you mean?
So those are black holes that they're not like your traditional black hole, like traditional
meaning like the center of the galaxy, like that's our run-in-the-mill black hole.
But these are more kind of, these are geared towards much longer time scales.
We're talking about cosmology, we're talking about cosmological times, we're talking going
back near the Big Bang.
What do those black holes look like?
And those are on the scales, those are tiny black holes.
So we're talking like when they're probably on the masses of like maybe maybe like Adam's molecules, maybe up to the size of like a planet.
We're talking about micro black holes.
The mass of a black hole does not matter.
The physics of the black hole is the same.
Whether you have a supermassive black hole or micro tiny primordial black hole,
the black hole physics are the same as we found out.
Theory says that, and theory's been correct so far.
There's some holes.
I'm working on it.
But it's been pretty good so far.
Thus far it's been pretty good.
Pretty good.
There's not a black hole that can just randomly pop up.
Okay.
Guys, don't worry.
Okay.
It's not going to be one in Manhattan, you're going to see it in a movie.
It's only movies.
You're like, like, Dr. Gamble had a bad day.
A black hole opens up in a subway,
just like coming to a theater to you.
Right.
Okay, so we're going to talk about the structure of them,
but I want to ask you about you.
How does one go from a normal person who doesn't know shit about this to someone who is like a theoretical astrophysicist studying the nature of black holes?
Yeah.
Yeah, how did it happen?
So, you first, you have to be four years old with a solar system placement in front of you. Pluto was a planet in 1995.
Fuck that.
And then you ask your mom does this on half fire and that's where my story begins. Really?
At four years old and she was like, oh crap. Okay. I need to put him in something
because she's a bi she was she has a degree in biology. She was like, okay, I don't do space.
Yeah.
So she she did that. So I mean, all along, through childhood, through college, high school, whatever, I would just
ask myself, okay, well, what if?
What?
Gravity is weird, but what does gravity actually do?
What do black holes do?
What's inside of a black hole?
So I googled, I looked up, okay, well, what are the unanswered questions in physics?
What do we not know yet? Dark matter was like at the top of the list, dark energy.
There's another weird thing that I'm probably not going to mention
because it's going to take us another hour.
What is it?
It's called dark flow, but I'm not going to...
Oh my God, I've never even heard of it.
Yeah, it's a bunch of weird stuff.
It's a controversial hypothesis apparently.
So, we're just going to set that aside.
But if you happen to Wikipedia, don't get distracted by this italicized warning
on the top of the page that says, not to be confused with dark energy, dark fluid, dark
matter or dark wave.
And I was like, hmm, and I clicked the dark wave link and it takes you to a page about
the 1990s goth scene, which then took me to an external website where I learned that I
would be considered an elder trad goth.
So we were spiraling.
And then of course some other things that pertain to black holes and the big bang and
other than I'm like, okay, so, and I looked up, well, why haven't we figured this out?
Oh, well, we don't know yet.
Why can't I do this?
So fast forward to college undergrad. I'm asking my advisor, I'm like, okay, so can't I do this? Yeah. So fast forward to college, undergrad.
I'm asking my advisor, I'm like, OK,
so I want to study black holes.
So I go, we don't have anybody here that does that.
I'm like, OK, well, how do I do this?
I'm like, math.
And I look up, I open what we call the Gravity Bible, which
is Myse Northorn and Wheeler, gravity.
That's heavy, man.
Thank you, MTW, for all the headache you've given me.
So, gravitation.
It's a 1,280-page, high-level textbook.
And yes, it is a religious text to astrophysicists.
So it was initially published, first came out in 1973.
And the reviews for it still swoon, saying things like,
a pedagogic masterpiece. There were rotten tomatoes for physics books. This would be
certified fresh. And it was co-written by Charles Meisner and Kip Thorne and John Wheeler. And Kip
was a co-winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics. And this book covers such topics as the theory of relativity, flat and curved spacetime, and black holes,
gravitational collapse, gravitational waves, cosmology, and so much more like an infomercial
for a manual of the universe. And it's got this stark black cover with a white diagram of an apple,
some sans-serif font, and kind of a rebellious sense of Nixon era futurism.
And honestly, I saw it and I was like, this would be the perfect graphic for a darkwave
album.
So, if you were ever set up on a date, let's say, someone sets you up on a date with an
astrophysicist and you should want to marry them on that first date, just ask them if
they still have their copy of gravitation lying around. And I look and I'm like, oh shit, there's a lot of math here that I didn't know at the
time.
Like what does this mean?
The hell is a metric tensor and all this?
And I'm like, okay, so let me flip.
And I go through the glossary and I'm like, okay, that's a lot of terms.
And at the time, I had not taken calculus three yet.
So I'm like, okay, let me go back to my actual homework.
That's due tomorrow to finish this and then go back on like weekends or my own time and start taking notes.
I started just rewriting things I saw in textbooks.
I didn't know what they said and I don't know what they meant, but I knew, okay, I had to practice
memorizing some of this so that when I actually went back
and I learned the math now, became an expert in the math, I was like, okay,
I've seen this before. I've seen it a while now.
So without knowing the full context, yeah, Dr. Gamble got familiar with the shapes of the equations,
the patterns, so that later the figures were familiar and he could jump into the house and the whys of that.
What?
I can now really explode my brain, right?
It'd be like, okay, well, okay,
well, let me come back to my art background.
I'm a painter also.
So I double majored in art in physics and undergrad.
I did not know that.
Yes, superpowers.
Did you make a lot of space painting?
I honestly, I didn't. Okay, you're like, this is a make a lot of space painting? I honestly, I didn't.
You're like, this is a different part of my life.
You're like, I'm...
I did a lot of seascapes,
because I like the beach, yeah.
So that was one of my favorite things.
I did a lot of portraits,
but you heard it here first.
I am gonna be doing a like Cubism Black Hole series in 2024.
Are you ready?
Yeah, I'll show you.
So we will link Dr. Gamble social media in the show notes in case you'd like to own
a painting by someone whose brain comprehends beautifully terrifying things in the universe.
That's the story of how I kind of, you kind of get interested in it.
But you have to be really intimate with the theory, with the actual philosophy of black
coal.
What's a black hole mean?
That's what I asked.
And so I was like, okay, well,
let me learn everything I can while college is cheap
in undergrad.
You know, I can just take an extra class
because I have a scholarship here
and just learn and ask questions.
That's what I really did.
I asked a lot of questions,
both to my professors, to myself,
and then others who actually studied black holes. And then I just went and did it.
I just found the textbooks, some of the math.
I knew I had to learn a lot of math.
So I started my graduate thesis, my dissertation,
two years before I got into grad school.
So it was the summer before my junior year in undergrad.
That's when I first started learning the math
that I knew I would need it for my PhD. So it was kind of like a foresight.
And what was your PhD? What was the dissertation name?
Oh my God. Okay, so here are the words that I can't really ignore.
Okay.
My dissertation was on a nonlinear gravitational wave theory for rotating black holes with
a positive cosmological constant.
Okay.
Under a viscoelastic interpretation.
Okay.
Once again, that was on gravitational radiation,
nonlinear wave theory in viscoelasticus-care-lambda spacetime.
Yep.
So what that means is I quite literally created
an extension to Einstein's theory of relativity
that now interpreted spacetime as some elastic property.
Wow, viscoelastic.
Viscoelastic.
Okay.
So if you think of elastic putty,
that's how I envisioned spacetime to act
around a rotating black hole,
radiating gravitational waves away.
So I'm thinking, okay, okay, this is weird, yes,
but I know the math to put this together.
And so the math, literally, I was like working with Legos
at that point in grad school.
I had one.
Literal Legos?
Actual Legos?
Sometimes, yes, because I mean, Legos are cool,
and I had them.
You know, if you're a grad student, play with Legos.
But the math was with Legos.
But the math was like Legos.
So we're like building blocks.
I could put an integral or derivative together and put tensors together and reconstruct them,
break them down and make new ones.
And I made some new math.
It's like fake new math.
But it's an operation that didn't exist before and I needed it to actually do my work.
So I was like, okay, well, why doesn't this again?
Why doesn't this exist?
Well, if it's not there, then create it.
Yeah.
So again, you know, I was trained as an artist.
I put the paintbrush down and picked up a piece of chalk.
So it's the same with it used the same part of your brain.
That's what I use the whole time, the creative aspect of your brain. That's what I used the whole time,
the creative aspect of your brain.
That's how I did my work.
And so can you explain where Einstein's calculations
don't really apply to some of what's out there?
Like I understand that like dark matter
might not totally fit in with a theory of relative.
Like there's something that it's like, oh, this doesn't work here.
What's going on there?
So, okay.
So no, Einstein's field equations, which is the principal equation for
general relativity.
And remember, general relativity is all about how mass affects the four
dimensions of time and space, but not for all stuff.
Things get really weird when you get to particles smaller than atoms. mass affects the four dimensions of time and space. But not for all stuff.
Things get really weird when you get to particles
smaller than atoms.
It doesn't quite work for dark matter or dark energy.
We have a best guess.
Of course, we have some modified gravity equations.
I'm going to leave it there because that's a whole other topic.
But if you go beyond the event horizon of a black hole, right?
So that's kind of the outer surface. That's like the point of no return.
Yeah.
If you go inside that relativity fails, we don't know what's going on.
So we're kind of taking the equations and we're kind of smearing them closer and
closer slowly, but it's not as simple as a plus b equals c.
But it's not as simple as a plus b equals c. It's a plus a little change in a plus a,
plus another little change in a plus a.
We're trying to sneak up on c or something
and not try to use b, right?
That's a full-fledged equation.
But we can only do that but so much.
And then they fail right at the event,
right at the singularity.
We have no idea what's
going on. We would need something called quantum gravity.
So gravity theories that work with those subatomic particles, but that's not really
happening yet. It's mystery. But we would need an interpretation of gravity on a quantum scale now. Okay. Which as of right now, we don't have a,
I would say a consensus
for what that theory should look like.
We have a whole bunch of competing theories.
One of them is loop quantum gravity.
We have a bunch of other string theories, another one,
but that's, you need at least seven dimensions to do that.
It's madness, I know.
But, you know, we're working on, okay, well,
very simple questions.
Does gravity behave the same way for planets
as it does atoms?
And that's where the quantum comes in.
And that's the quantum aspect.
Is it the same?
If it's not the same, well, then we need new physics.
How do we test for new physics?
We have no idea.
I don't know.
Can you walk me through the anatomy of black hole?
Cause what I understand is there's the event horizon, which is like the
where everything's kind of burning up around the edges.
And then where is the singularity?
And from what I picture it, it's like a big butterfly net that tapers into
something massive, but like,
what am I, how wrong am I?
I cringe whenever I see that.
I'm so sorry.
I just picture the wireframe like those pictures.
I know, and I, I try not to kill people for it, but it's like, okay, that's the best like
mathematical representation we could draw.
I'm like, okay, guys, do better.
We can...
Okay, so...
Okay, so it's not a funnel.
Okay, hang on to your hats, people.
So a black hole is actually a sphere.
What?
Yeah, it's actually a sphere.
So not only is it a sphere, but because the black hole is rotating,
it squishes along the poles.
So it's an oblate spheroid. Wow. The it's an oblate spheroid.
Wow.
The Earth is an oblate spheroid.
It's not a perfect sphere because it rotates.
Like an M&M or like a...
Exactly.
Like a not as squished M&M.
Not as squished M... a fat M&M.
Okay.
So if you think a fat M&M, that's what a black hole is.
Oh my God, it looks like a huge M&M.
And that's edge on, right?
Mm-hmm. Okay,
so now if we're looking birds-eye view down, down the pole, you're going to see a perfect
circle. Okay. Because it has what we call kind of circular equatorial symmetry. Mm-hmm.
So it's perfectly circular along the equator, but as you kind of go up towards the poles,
it changes. It's not a perfect sphere.
So now that's the outside of a black hole, right?
So along the middle, perfectly round, toward the top and bottom, less so.
And around the black hole is a corona, and that's apparently a billion degrees Celsius,
which Americans, that would be 1.8 billion and 32 degrees Fahrenheit, in case you're getting close to one.
But yeah, inward from the corona,
but before the event horizon,
is a hot nightlife spot called ergosphere.
Before we go inside, there's another area
right outside the black hole that's called the ergosphere.
Ergosphere meaning work sphere, work region.
The essence of the ergos sphere is that space time itself, not you,
not just the black hole, but space time itself is being dragged around.
So it is quite, quite impossible for you to stay still in the ergo sphere.
Because it's getting dragged around.
Because it's being dragged around the black hole with the blast.
The black hole spins, space time is being dragged around.
So not dragged around like a merry-go-round.
So you can imagine if you were on a merry-go-round, right?
And you took a picture, a long exposure picture, and you went around the merry-go-round, your
image was smear, right? Mm-hmm.
That's what you would see around a black hole in the ergo sphere.
You could see the back of your own head.
No.
Because the light would be dragged all the way around in heat dry balls.
Yes.
Okay.
Spacetime in a nutshell.
So dragging spacetime is so hard to grasp for someone who's like,
today is Wednesdays, tomorrow's Thursday.
I'm this years old.
What is space time in the aspect that it can be dragged?
We're sitting in this studio.
I can clock your time.
I can figure out your position in 3D in 4D, but is that actually space time?
No, we are talking about events now, not just points. We have to go to 4D instead of 3D.
Okay.
So x, y, z in time. 4D, we're talking about events in spacetime now.
So if some cosmic object were flat, it would occupy two dimensions on an x and a y axis.
But when something is three-dimensional, it has that added dimension of depth and we exist
in a three-dimensional world.
So I toss a sock at your face and that goes through three dimensions.
But according to Einstein, time is not only money, it's also the fourth dimension.
So space time doesn't...
They're going to kill me for this.
Space time, space time doesn't exist without events.
Okay.
Okay.
Got it.
Like plotting points, sort of?
Almost like plotting points.
Okay.
Right?
So, you can imagine the graph itself, like graph paper.
You got to imagine you put your dog on graph paper.
Okay. All right. And now, you can't see the graph paper.
Because you're looking at the dog.
Because you're looking at the dog.
But you know that the dog exists at some point on the graph paper.
So we're looking at mass and events, but can't forget that underneath it all,
space and time are affected and doing all kinds of mysterious things.
That is space time.
Yeah.
It is there, and there may be some quantum interpretation
of it that we haven't figured out yet.
On a very, very small, we call it the Planck scale.
We're talking 10 to the minus 35 meters.
What?
Tiny, tiny, tiny.
Space time, in essence, turns into what's called a quantum foam.
Yep, it's actually called, I. Spacetime, in essence, turns into what's called a quantum foam.
Yep, it's actually called, I hook this up,
quantum foam or spacetime foam.
So now in terms of just like a flat
or the graph paper analogy,
now you're talking about something like whipped cream.
So you're talking about like foam on top of a latte
in terms of not just events existing,
but events popping in and out of existence.
So now, okay, your dog might be there or it might not be.
Is that superposition or no? That's totally different.
That is superposition.
Yes.
Okay, so that's Schrodinger's dog sort of.
That is yes.
Okay.
That's where you would start.
of. That is, yes. Okay. That's where you would start.
Just a little heads up. The thought experiment of a cat in a box exposed to a 50-50 chance of dying from radioactive poison inside the box is 50% a bummer, but it was a way for Schrodinger,
who was a founder of quantum mechanics, to highlight that superposition is an absurdity when it's scaled up.
But superposition, that means something that can exist
in multiple states until it's observed,
has been validated experimentally via photons.
And we're going to talk more about that in a second.
But first, we're going to take a break for sponsors of the show.
We always donate to a cause of the oligarchs choosing
thanks to sponsors of the show.
And I'll be really honest, I realized that I didn't get the cause that Dr. Gamble wants
us to go to, but it's okay because we're back next week for part two.
We'll donate on behalf of this episode and next episode next week.
We'll tell you all about it.
But yeah, oops, that's how fresh these episodes are.
I record this today.
You get them tonight.
Anyway, thanks sponsors.
Okay, so for more on that superposition too,
you can see the quantum ontology episode
with Dr. Adam Becker.
But back to black holes and what is happening
on the inside to affect the outside?
So the event horizon is sort of that equatorial mishmash
of things going around.
Where is singularity?
It's at the very, very center. Now, again, because the black hole is spherical, the event horizon is actually a sphere.
Oh, oh, the whole thing is a sphere. It's a sphere, yes.
Now, here's the thing. Here's caveat.
We have four different classifications of black holes. You have a non-rotating, non-charged black hole, which is a Swarch child black hole, cool.
We have a rotating black hole that's uncharged,
curr black holes.
Those are your astrophysical ones, right?
Okay.
We have charged, non-rotating,
and then we have rotating charged.
Okay.
Okay, so that's our little black hole punnett square.
Okay, so think of charged being caffeinated
and rotating being the churning stomach of lactose.
So there's an oat milk decaf, non-charged, non-rotating,
a whole milk decaf one, rotating but uncharged,
a full calf oat milk charged, non-rotating,
and lastly a rotating
charged home milk full caffeine and I guess you can get any of those with spacetime foam depending on how good your barista is
If you have a non-rotating black hole the singularity is a point. Okay, so it's an infinitely small point
Where all our lines are our paths in in space-time point, and you
can't get out.
They all point down to the center.
As soon as you rotate that thing, it turns from a point into a ring.
So at astrophysical black hole, because we assume they're all rotating, right, it would
have a ring singularity, not a point.
It would be a ring at the very center.
And still tiny, tiny.
And still very tiny, tiny.
What's in the middle of the ring?
We don't know yet.
Yeah.
So now you can imagine, instead of you going from a point,
you're now going to something that is kind of like a ring,
a little surface.
So you can think of like a disk that space time ceases to exist on.
And at the very edge of that disk is our event horizon.
That's that ring, right?
Anything inside that singularity is what we call elsewhere.
Elsewhere? Is that actually the term?
It's the actual technical term.
No way.
It is the actual technical term.
We have, we have the past, of course, right? So we have the future, okay?
Past and future and if you look at a like a xyz plot if I'm pointing up
Vertical on the plot my axis would be like time
The horizontal axis would be space. Okay?
a
trajectory that's
Exactly at 45 degrees would be like traveling at speed of light.
In that tiny of an area?
In that regard, yes.
So again, we have to think abstractly here.
If I am moving faster than light, I'm moving closer and closer towards that spatial axis.
Okay.
So the speed of light cuts right through space and time on a graph, which is just a tiny
sliver of where it lands.
But that angle would change if you're beating light on the speed axis.
Which means time doesn't really pass that much.
Which means time is getting slower and slower and slower, but
I'm covering more and more space elsewhere.
No.
So we have the future that's directly up top, the past that's at the bottom of the axis,
right?
And then on the sides, left and right, we have what's called elsewhere.
Bonkers.
Bonkers, right? So time is not viscoelasticity.
That is, that is partly like time expanding.
In a sense, yes.
Okay.
But that was a new term that I came up with in grad school.
Okay.
So it's not very popular.
It's out there.
You can go read my dissertation if you want nightmares.
I imagine there's a lot of math in it.
There's 200 pages of math.
Oh my God.
And then if something gets, say, sucked into a black hole.
Okay, so from what I understand,
it's gravity condenses in that singularity.
Sort of.
It's just pulling it into it.
Sort of.
So now you can imagine, so we go back to the putty, right?
Yeah.
So it's the best analogy I can probably give you.
Go back to the putty and you hold it in your hand, right?
Imagine your hand being spacetime.
Okay.
But the putty is like an atom or some kind.
If you keep squeezing your hand around the putty,
you are simulating spacetime shrinking
and shrinking and shrinking.
Oh.
But what happens to the putty?
Yeah.
The putty has to condense also.
But the putty cannot overcome that force, which is gravity,
shrinking things down.
So now you have no choice but to fall all the way
towards the singularity.
Uh-huh.
Well, how long is that going to take?
Yeah.
An infinite amount of time. Because
the duration of time becomes slower and slower and slower, but you're covering more and more
space.
So putty is matter, and your hand would represent the squish of gravity as space-time condenses.
So this matter, the putty gets slowly condensed toward a tiny point. It's like a cosmic
stress ball on a zoom call that feels like it's never gonna end.
Space will stretch out, time will contract. So when do you reach the singularity?
You could maybe never. Oh my gosh.
According to our, now, other theories you're gonna listen to this. According to our, now, other theories, you're gonna listen to this. According to our theories, never.
But we need new science, we need new physics,
we need quantum gravity.
Quantum gravity is probably gonna be
like the buzzword for this.
Yeah, we need quantum gravity.
And there are innumerable black holes out there.
There are probably trillions of black holes out there.
Trillions of black holes out there.
Trillions of black holes.
And when you're studying them, so much of this is theory based on what kind of math
can work.
What about things like LIGO and things like the imaging of the event horizon that came
out a couple of years ago that looked kind of like a glowing orange disc?
Okay.
So for one of my other jobs, a TV job, Innovation Nation on CBS,
I got to interview one of the data scientists
imaging this event horizon of the black hole M87.
And her name is Dr. Katie Bowman.
Let's roll the tape.
The event horizon of a black hole is its surface,
a sort of point of no return.
And therein lies the name of the project
of which Katie was a part, the Event Horizon Telescope,
an international collaboration capturing images of black holes
using a global array of eight telescopes.
So, the glowing orange disc is called a photon ring.
You are watching the very extreme matter as it's falling into the black hole.
So we are quite literally taking an image of the edge of space time.
If you were to take a picture of the last thing a photon would see before it fell in,
that's probably it.
We are trying to get even closer. So now I am on a mission concept team
to kind of extend that event horizon telescope
concept into space so we can look even deeper.
So we're trying to appear right on the very edge
of the event horizon.
What does that look like?
What radiation can we collect?
What do the photons look like?
How are we gonna collect? What do the photons look like?
How are we going to collect?
Weird matter. Do we see anything else there?
Is that where aliens exist?
Yeah, I don't know.
How far away do you have to go to keep looking at those?
And how far away was the photon ring that was imaged?
The popular images that you see are both of
Sajji Star, our Milky Way
Supermassive Black Hole,
and another Supermassive black hole called M87.
So of course, these are catalog names,
and astronomers love cataloging things.
Yikes.
We have very weird names for chicken,
and I don't understand why.
Just pick one system and stick to it.
Anyways, M87 presents itself as a very unique and very energetic black hole. It's
at the right perfect angle for observing. It's got a lot of activity around the disk.
It's rotating very rapidly. We like that. It's emitting in all types of spectra across
the electromagnetic spectrum. We're doing radio through gamma rays, cosmic rays, x-rays, infrared, all of them.
And for more on x-rays, we have a radiology episode,
as well as an invisible photology episode
with an expert physicist on this about invisibility cloaks.
And yeah, we're gonna link those in the show notes.
And yeah, so this black hole, M87,
it's got a nice variety of rays, and we're like,
ooh, thank you, we can got a nice variety of rays. And we're like, ooh, thank you.
We can use these, we like you.
So it's a very nice, well-behaved,
as I like to say, black hole.
There are others that are out there that are misbehaving.
You're like, why are you doing this?
Stop it, stay still, stop merging.
You don't need to merge again
if you've merged at first time.
And yeah, if black holes can't escape each other's gravity, they can swallow each other.
Like two cell phone providers that suddenly merge and you're like, where do I even pay
you bastards?
So that is, that's what we're trying to see.
Are photon rings the same around every black hole?
Are there other photon rings that we haven't seen?
Are there different types of photon rings?
Yeah.
We get photon rings in two different directions.
What happens?
So there's a lot of new science,
a lot of new things that are out there.
Have we figured them out yet?
No, that's why we send stuff to space and observe.
And now you work with NASA.
Yeah.
Yeah, and NASA Goddard, right?
And how long have you been with NASA?
What was that like?
So I started August 2021.
They kind of found me.
Of course, everybody applies to NASA
and you send your application out
and you're like, okay, I didn't get picked.
I'm gonna move on.
But then they said, okay,
hey, do you want to interview?
I'm like, the fuck?
Yes.
Are you spamming me?
And this was the deputy director, my current boss.
I'm like, you gotta be, you gotta be kidding me.
Are you re, okay.
Did you check the email address to make sure it wasn't like
NASA 4445 at Hotmail?
I checked it four times.
Yeah.
So I put together like 30 slides of like the work I was doing
post grad school.
It was unfunded, it was unsupported.
I was just doing it on the side.
So I was like, okay, one day I'm going to present this to somebody and they're going
to like it.
Turns out it was NASA.
Oh my God.
Which got me my chop now.
Oh my God.
They loved it.
And I was like, okay.
And you were doing this, who'd you collaborate with?
I was like, nobody.
Oh my God.
I was like, oh, did you, okay.
So how were you supported?
It's like, I didn't have funding for this.
I just did it because I liked it.
And they were so impressed by it.
That's gotta be so gratifying.
It was so gratifying.
Now, it gets even better.
So I tell my mom this and she's like,
shut up, I'm like, yeah, mom with NASA.
I said, when are you starting?
You get the job?
I'm like, they haven't offered me anything yet.
Don't jinx it.
It was a four month process.
Another interview.
And that is kind of like when my official offer came in and stuff,
and I was like, okay, do I leave my current job and work for NASA?
Do I make more money here? Or do I...
And my mom's like, why are you thinking about this?
Yeah.
What are you doing?
Yeah.
I'm like, okay, yeah. I'm being stupid.
Yeah, sure, I'm going to accept.
My very first day at my dream job at NASA
was the day of my mom's birthday.
August 16th, 2021.
So I gave her my job acceptance to NASA for her birthday.
That was her birthday gift.
I'm like, Mom, I finally got to NASA.
So we both were like on the phone, like, I know, I'm crying too.
It was, yes, it was truly amazing.
And I had to get her t-shirts, and I probably still
heard NASA t-shirts, even though she has three.
And it all started with a, is the sun on fire?
It all started with, is the sun on fire?
Yeah.
Did you ever find that placement?
What restaurant was it?
I have no idea where it's at now.
Mom, if you still have it, keep it,
because it's probably gold, because Pluto is on there.
Yeah.
So, and they don't make those anymore.
Collectors item, either way.
Collectors item.
Can I ask you questions from listeners?
Yes.
OK, because we have a lot.
Oh, my God.
So many.
OK.
So next week, we will ask Dr. Ron Gamble, a smart person, all kinds of not smart and
very smart questions in the thrilling and the heavy conclusion of black holes, including
all of your questions from Patreon.
Meanwhile, we've linked his work and social media in the show notes along with a ton of
related episodes that you might love and get cosmic vertigo from.
We also have shorter episodes that you might love and get cosmic vertigo from. We also have shorter
episodes that are classroom friendly. They're okay for kids and those are called Smologies.
They're linked in the show notes as well as our social media where at oligies on Instagram
and Twitter. I'm at Ali Ward all over the place. Ali just has one L. To become a patron
and submit your questions and maybe hear your name, including audio questions that we may
play your voice on the show, you can sign up at patreon.com. It's just a dollar
to get in there. Allergy's merch is available at allergymerch.com. Thank you, Aaron Talbert,
for admitting the Allergy's podcast Facebook group. Aveline Malik makes our professional
transcripts. A wonderful Noel to work as our scheduling producer. Susan Hale is our managing
director. The dark matter holds us all together. Kelly Ardwire does the website.
Nick Thorburn wrote the theme music and our supermassive editor swirling all this together
into an episode is Mercedes-Maitland of Maitland Audio.
And if you stick around until the end of the episode, I'll tell you a secret.
You're going to get three today.
Can you believe it?
Okay.
Number one, those boots that I mentioned up top, I'm not going to gatekeep those.
They're made by Taft and I only know that because I looked on Dr. Gamble's Instagram
and I was like, ooh, what are those boots after he wore them to my house?
They're lovely boots.
I just want to let you know.
Take a gander.
Gorgeous.
They are not a sponsor of the show at all.
I'm just showing them out.
Two, I recorded a bunch of this voiceover already and then I went to go edit it and I realized
that my mic hadn't been on.
It happens impregnantly. But when it does, I want to take something wet and floppy,
like an alive jellyfish, and I want to hit myself in the face with it. But it's okay,
we got to the end. The least casual secret I'm going to tell you is that on March 1st,
I'm having some surgery. What am I having done? Is it elective? Is it cosmetic? Is it
urgent? Are they going to know I'm a fake redhead
and not give me too much anesthetic?
Should I do an anesthesiology episode?
Grogly?
I might see if they'll let me take my whole kit
into the operating room.
I don't know if that's a violation of my own hippolaws.
Anyway, I won't tell you quite what it is yet.
We'll wait to get a little more information,
but I'm gonna try my best in early March to recover okay.
We'll see what we can crank out during that recovery,
and yeah, we'll learn some stuff from it eventually,
but March should be interesting, so.
But next week, obviously, we'll be back
with the thrilling conclusion of Black Hole's part two.
Stay tuned, okay, bye-bye.
Hackadermatology, homiology, cryptozoology,
letology, nanotechnology, Litology, Nanotechnology, Meteorology, Fectology, Nephology, Seriology, Celanology.
Enjoy your latte.