Episode #468 from 1:17:59
Fuzzballs & soft hair
So then from string theory, one of the resolutions is called fuzz balls. I love physics so much. Originating from string theory, this proposal suggests that black holes aren't singularities surrounded by empty space and an event horizon. Instead, they are horizonless, complex, tangled objects, AKA fuzz balls made of strings and brains roughly the size of the would-be event horizon. There's no single point of infinite density and no true horizon to cross. In some sense it says there's no interior to the black hole, nothing of a cross. So I gave you this very nice story that there's no drama, sometimes that's how it's described, at the event horizon, and you fall through and there's nothing there. This other idea says, "Well, hold on a second, if it's really strings, as I get close to this magnifying quality and this slowing time down near the event horizon it is as though I put a magnifying glass on things and now the strings aren't so microscopic, they smear around, and then they get caught like a tangle around the event horizon, and they just actually never fall through." I don't think that either, but it was interesting.
People
Why this moment matters
So then from string theory, one of the resolutions is called fuzz balls. I love physics so much. Originating from string theory, this proposal suggests that black holes aren't singularities surrounded by empty space and an event horizon. Instead, they are horizonless, complex, tangled objects, AKA fuzz balls made of strings and brains roughly the size of the would-be event horizon. There's no single point of infinite density and no true horizon to cross. In some sense it says there's no interior to the black hole, nothing of a cross. So I gave you this very nice story that there's no drama, sometimes that's how it's described, at the event horizon, and you fall through and there's nothing there. This other idea says, "Well, hold on a second, if it's really strings, as I get close to this magnifying quality and this slowing time down near the event horizon it is as though I put a magnifying glass on things and now the strings aren't so microscopic, they smear around, and then they get caught like a tangle around the event horizon, and they just actually never fall through." I don't think that either, but it was interesting.
People and topics
People