Texarkana Gazette

Scientists muse about how to design a wormhole

- By Dennis Overbye

Want to get away? Far away? There is a way. Maybe.

In science fiction, wormholes — tunnels through space and time — have long been the preferred means of travel across the universe.

So I was intrigued when a pair of physicists suggested recently that it might be possible to determine if there is a cosmic subway station at the center of our own galaxy. That is where a supermassi­ve black hole — an invisible cosmic tombstone 4 million times more massive than the sun — lurks, wreathed in mystery and imaginatio­n behind the dusty clouds of Sagittariu­s.

Wormholes are another prediction of Einstein’s theory of general relativity, which has already delivered such wonders as an expanding universe and black holes, objects so dense they swallow light. One simple version of a wormhole, called an Einstein-Rosen bridge, consists of a pair of black holes stuck back-to-back, each facing out into its own realm of the universe or universes and connected by a “throat” — the wormhole.

But nobody knows if wormholes actually exist. If wormholes did exist, they wouldn’t let you go anywhere or even send a message. The moment you tried, the wormhole would crinkle up and crush you.

To prevent a wormhole from imploding, it would have to be filled with an exotic substance, sometimes called phantom energy, that exerted negative gravity. But most scientists think the laws of physics forbid such a substance.

“To get a stable, traversabl­e wormhole, you need some magic,” said Dejan Stojkovic, a physicist at the University at Buffalo and a co-author of a recent paper on the topic.

But for theorists who believe in magic, there are millions of ways to design a wormhole, Thorne said in an email. “Since we know nothing firm about the technologi­es and materials available to a very advanced civilizati­on, we physicists have an infinity of freedom in building models for traversabl­e wormholes,” he wrote.

In their paper, published Oct. 10 in Physical Review D, Stojkovic and De-Chang Dai, of Yangzhou University in China, envisaged a layer of this exotic phantom energy packed around the entrance to the Sagittariu­s black hole, wedging open a wormhole through which you could safely pass. As a sufficient­ly small object approached the hole, and just before it reached the event horizon, the point of no gravitatio­nal return, it would suddenly find itself in another time and place, perhaps in another universe.

The authors proposed that their thought experiment offered a way to test if wormholes actually exist. Even if the wormhole was too small for a star or a spaceship to traverse, gravity could reach through, they contend.

“Gravity is just a property of space-time itself, so if you shake one end of it, you will feel it on the other end too,” Stojkovic explained in a series of email exchanges.

So a star on one side of a wormhole might feel a gravitatio­nal tug from a star or other massive object on the other side of the wormhole. To astronomer­s, strange deviations in one star’s trajectory could indicate the influence of a “ghost star” reaching through the wormhole from the far side.

Dai and his colleague have a particular star in mind to test the idea: a blue star known as S2, or sometimes S02, that tightly circles the Sagittariu­s black hole, approachin­g to within 11 billion miles every 16 years. Astronomer­s have been following the star for years to gain clues about Einstein’s theory of gravity and the inner workings of the black hole. But they might be able to see deeper.

Imagine that the Milky Way black hole, known officially as Sagittariu­s A* (pronounced “A-star”), harbored such a wormhole, Dai and Stojkovic wrote in the paper. Presumably, the gravity of stars or other massive objects on the far side could leak through the wormhole and tug S2 slightly off its orbit. With a few more years of study, they noted, astronomer­s should know S2’s orbit precisely enough to detect such a tug, which would accelerate the star about one millionth of a meter per second per second. Astronomer­s could also look for similar effects near other known black holes.

“This would be spectacula­r if observed,” Thorne wrote in an email.

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