Black holes don’t usually get pushed around, but a very lightweight
particle can theoretically stop a rotating black hole by setting off a
so-called “black-hole bomb.” New calculations reported in Physical Review Letters
show that photons, or photonlike particles, could be considered
bomb-making material if they have a mass. A massive photon is not
theoretically ruled out, but it would have implications for the
dispersion of light and the existence of magnetic monopoles. However,
the mere existence of spinning (unbombed) black holes constrains this
possibility, thus allowing the authors to put the most stringent limit
yet on the mass of the photon.
Falling into a black hole means curtains for most things.
But physicists have shown that a hypothetical spin-zero particle—called
a scalar boson—could quantum-mechanically bind to a rotating black hole
if the particle’s Compton wavelength (which is inversely proportional
to its mass) is roughly equal to the radius of the black hole. The
resulting gravitational “atom” would lead to a runaway effect, or bomb,
that zaps the hole’s rotational energy in a relatively short time.
Paolo Pani, at the Technical University of Lisbon in
Portugal, and his colleagues extended these investigations to massive
spin-one particles, such as massive photons. The calculations in this
case are extremely difficult, so the researchers studied slowly rotating
black holes and then extrapolated their results to fast rotation. They
found that massive spin-one particles trigger more powerful “bombs” than
scalar (spin-zero) particles. The observed rotation of supermassive
black holes rules out photons (as well as photonlike particles, that
some theories suggest could contribute to dark matter) of mass above 4×10−20eV . – Michael Schirber
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