Is the big bang a black hole?
This question can be made into several more
specific questions with different answers.
Why did the universe not collapse and form a black
hole at the beginning?
Sometimes people find it hard to understand why the
big bang is not a black hole. After all, the density of
matter in the first fraction of a second was much higher than
that found in any star, and dense matter is supposed to curve
space-time strongly. At sufficient density there must be
matter contained within a region smaller than the
Schwarzschild radius for its mass. Nevertheless, the
big bang manages to avoid being trapped inside a
black hole of its own making and paradoxically the
space near the singularity is actually flat rather
than curving tightly. How can this be?
The short answer is that the big bang gets away
with it because it is expanding rapidly near the
beginning and the rate of expansion is slowing down.
Space can be flat while space-time is not.
The curvature can come from the temporal parts of the
space-time metric which measures the deceleration of the expansion
of the universe. So the total curvature of space-time is
related to the density of matter but there is a
contribution to curvature from the expansion as
well as from any curvature of space. The Schwarzschild
solution of the gravitational equations is static
and demonstrates the limits placed on a static
spherical body before it must collapse to a black
hole. The Schwarzschild limit does not apply to
rapidly expanding matter.
What is the distinction between the big bang model and a black hole?
The standard big bang models are the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker
(FRW) solutions of the gravitational field equations of general
relativity. These can describe open or closed universes. All
these FRW universes have a singularity at the origin of time which
represents the big bang. Black holes also have singularities.
Furthermore, in the case of a closed universe no light can escape
which is just the common definition of a black hole. So what
is the difference?
The first clear difference is that the big bang singularity of the
FRW models lies in the past of all events in the universe, whereas the
singularity of a black hole lies in the future. The big bang is
therefore more like a white hole which is the time reversal of
a black hole. According to classical general relativity white
holes should not exist since they cannot be created for the
same (time-reversed) reasons that black holes can not be destroyed.
This might not apply if they always existed.
But the standard FRW big bang models are also different from
a white hole. A white hole has an event horizon
which is the reverse of a black hole event horizon. Nothing can
pass into this horizon just as nothing can escape from a black hole
horizon. Roughly speaking, this is the definition of a white hole.
Notice that it would have been easy to show that the FRW model
is different from a standard black or white hole solution such
as the static Schwarzschild solutions or rotation Kerr solutions,
but it is more difficult to demonstrate the difference from a
more general black or white hole. The real difference is that
the FRW models do not have the same type of event horizon as
a white or black hole. Outside a white hole event horizon there
are world lines which can be traced back into the past
indefinitely without ever meeting the white hole singularity
whereas in a FRW cosmology all worldline originate at the
singularity.
Could the big bang be a black or white hole all the same?
In the previous answer I was careful to only argue that
the standard FRW big bang model is distinct from a black
or white hole. The real universe may be different from the
FRW universe so can we rule out the possibility that it is
a black or white hole? I am not going
to enter into such issues as to whether there was actually
a singularity and I will assume that general relativity is
effectively correct as for as we are concerned here.
The previous argument against the big bang being a
black hole still applies. The black hole singularity always
lies in the future light cone whereas astronomical observation
clearly indicate a hot big bang in the past. The possibility
that the big bang is actually a white hole remains.
The major assumption of the FRW cosmologies is that
the universe is homogeneous and isotropic on large scales.
That is to say that it looks the same everywhere and in every
direction at any given cosmological time. There is good
astronomical evidence that the distribution of galaxies
is fairly homogeneous and isotropic on scales larger than
a few hundred million light years. The high level of
isotropy of the cosmic background radiation (CBR) is
strong supporting evidence for homogeneity. However, the
size of the observable universe is limited by the speed
of light, and the age of the universe. We see only as far as
about ten to twenty billion light years which is about 100 times
larger than the scales on which structure is seen in galaxy
distributions.
Homogeniety has always been a debated topic. The
universe itself may well be many orders of magnitude
larger than what we can observe, or it may be infinite.
Astronomer Martin Rees compares our view like looking
out to sea from a ship in the middle of the ocean. As
we look out beyond the local disturbances of the waves
we see an apparently endless and featureless seascape.
From a ship the horizon will be only a few miles away
and the ocean may stretch for hundreds of miles before
there is land. When we look out into space with our
largest telescopes our view is also limited to a finite
distance. No matter how smooth it seems, we cannot assume
that it continues like that beyond where we can see. So
homogeneity is not certain on scales much larger than
the observable universe. We might argue in favour of it
on philosophical grounds but we cannot prove it.
In that case we must ask if there is a white hole
model for the universe which would be as consistent with
observations as the FRW models. Some people initially think that
the answer must be no because white holes (like black holes)
have tidal forces which stretch and compress in different
directions. Hence they are quite different from what
we observe. This is not conclusive because it applies
only to the space-time of a black hole in the absence
of matter. Inside a star the tidal forces can be absent.
A white hole model which fitted cosmological
observation would have to be the time reversal of
a star collapsing to form a black hole. To a good
approximation we could ignore
pressure and treat it like a spherical cloud of dust
with no internal forces other than gravity. Stellar
collapse has been intensively studied since the seminal
work of Snyder and Oppenheimer in 1939 and this simple
case is well understood. It is possible to construct an
exact model of stellar collapse in the absence of pressure
by gluing together any FRW solution inside the spherical
star and a Schwarzschild solution outside. Space-time
within the star remains homogeneous and isotropic during
the collapse.
It follows that the time reversal of this model for
a collapsing sphere of dust is indistinguishable from the
FRW models if the dust sphere is larger than
the observable universe. In other words, we cannot rule out the
possibility that the universe is a very large white hole.
Only by waiting many billions of years until the edge of the
sphere comes into view could we know.
It has to be admitted that if we drop the assumptions of
homogeneity and isotropy then there are many other possible
cosmological models including many with non-trivial
topologies. This makes it difficult to derive anything
concrete from such theories. But this has not stopped
some brave and imaginative cosmologists thinking about
them. One of the most exciting possibilities was
considered by C. Hellaby, in 1987 who envisaged the
Universe being created as a string of beads of isolated
while holes that explode independently and coalesce
into one Universe at a certain moment. This is all
described by a single exact solution of general
relativity.
There is one final twist in the answer to this question.
It has been suggested by Stephen Hawking that once quantum
effects are accounted for, the distinction
between black holes and white holes is not as clear as it
may seem. This is because of Hawking radiation which shows that
black holes can lose matter. (see the relativity
FAQ article on Hawking radiation.)
A black hole in thermal equilibrium
with surrounding radiation might have to be time symmetric in
which case it would be the same as a white hole.
This idea is controversial, but if true it would mean that
the universe could be both a white hole and a black hole
at the same time. Perhaps the truth is even stranger.
In other words, who knows?
References
For the mathematical details of the FRW standard big bang
models, black hole solutions and, in particular the model
of stellar collapse which is a combination of FRW and
Schwarzschild's black hole solution, see:
Misner, Thorne and Wheeler, Gravitation, Freeman
(1973)
An excellent book giving a comprehensive guide
to inhomogeneous cosmologies including white hole
solutions is:
Andrzej Krasinski Inhomogeneous cosmological
models, Cambridge University Press (1997)
For Hawking's suggestion that black holes are also
white holes see:
Hawking and Penrose, The Nature of Space and Time,
Princeton (1996)
The seascape analogy of Martin Rees can be found in his
excellent book:
Rees, Before the Beginning, Our universe and others,
Simon and Schuster, (1997)
My thanks go to Andrzej Krasinski for useful
information about inhomogeneous cosmologies
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