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No Black Holes from Light

1 pointsby raattgiftabout 1 year ago

1 comment

raattgiftabout 1 year ago
tl;dr : enough incoming light will be scattered out of the central region around the focal point that you can&#x27;t turn a &quot;vacuum&quot; central region into a spherically symmetric non-rotating black hole with masses less than tens of thousands of suns, when you start with a spherically symmetric shell of light.<p>Choice quote, after equation (9): &quot;The intensity required to form a laboratory-scale kugelblitz (R ~&lt; 1m) would be of approximately 10^83 W&#x2F;m^2, more than 50 orders of magnitude above the state-of-the-art laser pulse intensities, which reach 10^27 W&#x2F;m^2. For astrophysical sources, the intensity required is still many orders of magnitude above he highest-intensity sources in the universe, including quasars and supernovae [...] total power input must [be much more than] the bolometric luminosity of the brightest quasars [...] for any kugelblitz radius above the Planck length.&quot;