Skip to content
Home » Hawking’s Black Hole Paradox Explained: Fabio Pacucci (Transcript)

Hawking’s Black Hole Paradox Explained: Fabio Pacucci (Transcript)

“In space no one can hear you scream; and in a black hole, no one can see you disappear.” – Stephen Hawking

TED-Ed Lesson TRANSCRIPT

Scientists work on the boundaries of the unknown, where every new piece of knowledge forms a path into a void of uncertainty. And nothing is more uncertain – or potentially enlightening – than a paradox.

Throughout history, paradoxes have threatened to undermine everything we know, and just as often, they’ve reshaped our understanding of the world.

Today, one of the biggest paradoxes in the universe threatens to unravel the fields of general relativity and quantum mechanics: the black hole information paradox.

To understand this paradox, we first need to define what we mean by “information.” Typically, the information we talk about is visible to the naked eye.

For example, this kind of information tells us that an apple is red, round, and shiny. But physicists are more concerned with quantum information. This refers to the quantum properties of all the particles that make up that apple, such as their position, velocity and spin.

Every object in the universe is composed of particles with unique quantum properties. This idea is evoked most significantly in a vital law of physics: the total amount of quantum information in the Universe must be conserved.

Even if you destroy an object beyond recognition, its quantum information is never permanently deleted. And theoretically, knowledge of that information would allow us to recreate the object from its particle components.

Conservation of information isn’t just an arbitrary rule, but a mathematical necessity, upon which much of modern science is built.

But around black holes, those foundations get shaken. When an apple enters a black hole, it seems as though it leaves the universe, and all its quantum information becomes irretrievably lost.

However, this doesn’t immediately break the laws of physics.