Business Standard

BLACK HOLE DISCOVERIE­S WIN PHYSICS NOBEL PRIZE

- NIKLAS POLLARD & DOUGLAS BUSVINE 6 October

Britain’s Roger Penrose, Reinhard G enzel of Germany and American Andrea Ghez won the 2020 Nobel Prize for Physics for their discoverie­s about one of the most exotic phenomena in the universe, the black hole, the award-giving body said on Tuesday.

Penrose, professor at the University of Oxford, won half the prize for his work using mathematic­s to prove that black holes are a direct consequenc­e of the general theory of relativity.

Genzel, of the Max Planck Institute and University of California, Berkeley, and Ghez, at the University of California, Los Angeles, shared the other half for discoverin­g that an invisible and extremely heavy object governs the orbits of stars at the centre of our galaxy.

Ghez — only the fourth woman to be awarded the Physics prize after Marie Curie in 1903, Maria Goeppert-mayer in 1963 and Donna Strickland in 2018 — said she hoped it would inspire other women to enter her field.

Asked about the discovery of a massive yet invisible object at the heart of the Milky Way, Ghez said “the first thing is doubt”.

“You have to prove to yourself that what you are really seeing is what you think you are seeing. So, both doubt and excitement,” she said in a call with the committee after receiving the award.

“It’s that feeling of being at the frontier of research when you have to always question what you are seeing.”

Warping space and time

Scientists have wondered since the late 18th century whether any object existed in the universe that would exert a gravitatio­nal pull so strong that light may not be able to escape.

Nobel laureate Albert Einstein predicted in 1915, in his general theory of relativity, that space and time would be warped by the force of gravity.

But it was not until a seminal paper i n 1965 t hat Penrose proved that black holes can really form — describing them in detail and stating that, at their centre, time and space cease to exist.

Illustrati­ng Penrose’s insight at the awards presentati­on in Stockholm, Ulf Danielsson of the Nobel Committee held a black ball the size of a grapefruit in one hand and pointed at it with the finger of his other hand. At the ball’s edge, time stands still, Danielsson said, and as his finger pushed into it, its tip moves into the future.

It would be impossible to withdraw one’s finger without tearing it apart. Instead it would be “carried all the way into the centre of the black hole, where time ends and the known laws of physics cease to apply”.

 ??  ??
 ?? REUTERS ?? Members of the Nobel Committee for Physics announce the winners of this year’s prize in Stockholm on Tuesday
REUTERS Members of the Nobel Committee for Physics announce the winners of this year’s prize in Stockholm on Tuesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India