FINAL STEPHEN HAWKING PAPER
In which the late pop-science icon discusses how to escape a black hole — and maybe live forever,
The cosmologist and pop-science icon Stephen Hawking, who died in March on Einstein’s birthday, spoke out from the grave recently in the form of his last scientific paper. Appropriately for a man on the other side, the paper is about how to escape from a black hole.
Cleansed of its abstract mathematics, the paper is an ode to memory, loss and the oldest of human yearnings, the desire for transcendence. As the doomed figure in Bruce Springsteen’s “Atlantic City” sings, “Everything dies, baby, that’s a fact, but maybe everything that dies someday comes back.”
Hawking was the manifestation of perseverance; stricken by Lou Gehrig’s disease, he managed to conquer the universe from a wheelchair. The fate of matter or information caught in a black hole is one that defined his career, and it has become one of the deepest issues in physics.
Black holes are objects so dense that, according to Einstein’s law of general relativity, not even light can escape. In 1974, Hawking turned these objects, and the rest of physics, inside-out. He discovered that the random quantum effects that rule the microscopic world would cause black holes to leak and, eventually, explode and disappear.
In the fullness of time, all the mass and energy that had fallen into the hole would come back out. But, according to classical Einstein equations, black holes are disturbingly simple; their only properties are mass, electrical charge and angular momentum. Every other detail about what falls into one disappears from the universe’s memory banks. A black hole has no complications — no hair, the saying went.
So the fountain of matter and energy exiting a black hole would be random, Hawking emphasized in a paper in 1975. If you fell into one and came back out, you would lack all the details that had made you: male or female, blue eyes or brown, New York Yankee fan or Boston Red Sox fan. The equation describing that fate is inscribed on Hawking’s tombstone, in Westminster Abbey.
That is some kind of reincarnation. If nature can forget you, it could forget anything — a death blow to science’s ability to reconstruct the past or predict the future. Thirty years later, Hawking recanted, but the argument went on. The “information paradox,” as it is known, remained at the centre of physics because nobody, not even Hawking, could explain how black holes actually process the information that enters or exits them. But scientists have enjoyed theorizing about the nature of spacetime, information and memory. Some have suggested that you cannot even get into a black hole without being vapourized by a firewall of energy, let alone get back out.
Recent years have brought a glimmer of hope. Andrew Strominger of Harvard discovered that, when viewed from the right mathematical perspective — that of a light ray headed toward the infinite future — black holes are more complicated than we thought. They have what Strominger has called “soft hair,” in the form of those imaginary light rays, which can be ruffled, stroked, twisted and otherwise arranged by material coming into the black hole. In principle, this hair could encode information on the surface of the black hole, recording all those details that Einstein’s equations supposedly leave out.
Whether this is enough to save physics, let alone a person falling into a black hole, is what Hawking was working on in the years before he died.
“When I wrote my paper 40 years ago, I thought the information would pass into another universe,” he told me at a Harvard conference. Now, he said, it’s on the surface of the black hole. “The information will be re-emitted when the black hole evaporates.”
Other experts have been more measured, saying that if soft hair does not solve the information paradox, it might at least help.
In his recent posthumous report, which drew a flurry of press, Hawking and his colleagues endeavoured to show how this optimistic idea could work. Besides Hawking, the paper’s authors were Strominger, and Malcolm Perry and Sasha Haco of Cambridge University.
Strominger is hopeful that physicists one day will be able to understand black holes just by reading what is written in this soft hair. “We didn’t prove it,” he said in an email. But they did show how all the pieces could fit together: “If our guess is right, this paper will be of central importance. If not, it will be a technical footnote.”
Few of us, including Hawking, ever harboured the hope that solving the information paradox would bring back our parents, the dinosaurs or Joe DiMaggio from whatever was waiting in Atlantic City. Somewhere along the way we’ve all made some sort of accommodation with the idea that our personal timelines will come to an end, but we take some comfort in knowing that we will be remembered, and that our genes and books and names will carry on.
Some astronomers now say that even this pale version of salvation might be in jeopardy. A mysterious force called dark energy is speeding up the expansion of the universe.
Someday, these experts say, if the expansion continues, making the galaxies fly away faster and faster, the rest of the universe will be permanently out of sight to us, and we will be forever out of sight of it. It would be as if we were surrounded by a black hole, into which all our information and memory were disappearing.
Our little bubble of the Milky Way might always remember Aretha and Cleopatra and Shakespeare and Hawking. But will the rest of the universe remember us?