Infinite Time Dilation at the Surface of a Black Hole?

In summary: If the black hole was quantum, then the clock would only show the number of years that have passed for you, since you would have to withstand the radiation emitted by the black hole in order to take the measurement.
  • #71
PeterDonis said:
You're missing the key point I was making: the integral that appears in the formula for ##t_r## is a *definite* integral: it's taken from some finite value ##R## of the ##r## coordinate to infinity. So if you're trying to evaluate how ##t_r## relates to ##t## at infinity, you need to let the lower limit of the integral, ##R##, tend to infinity itself. In *that* limit, the integral does vanish; heuristically, this is because you're adding together fewer and fewer terms, and the "number of terms" decreases linearly while the "size of the terms" increases only sub-linearly (I'm not sure it's as simple as just a square root dependence, but it's certainly sub-linear). I don't think the Wiki page is taking this into account.

You are wrong. You can't integrate ##1/r^{1/2}## to infinity.
 
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  • #72
DKS said:
You are wrong. You can't integrate ##1/r^{1/2}## to infinity.

The Wikipedia page is implicitly doing the same thing; it's just not telling you what the limits of integration are.

On reading what you quoted, however, I admit it's garbled. I need to look at references again before trying to un-garble it.
 
  • #73
PeterDonis said:
The Wikipedia page is implicitly doing the same thing; it's just not telling you what the limits of integration are.

On reading what you quoted, however, I admit it's garbled. I need to look at references again before trying to un-garble it.
Wikipedia is fine. ##t_r## is undefined for ##r \rightarrow \infty##. You may want to reconsider your reasoning that ##t_r(evaporation) = t(evaporation)##.
E.g., http://www.math.unb.ca/~sseahra/resources/notes/black_holes.pdf eq. 108.
 
  • #74
DKS said:

That equation does match what I'm finding in other references. However, it doesn't make sense to me, because, as you note, it makes ##t_f \rightarrow \infty## for ##r \rightarrow \infty##. I had always understood that the Painleve chart "matched up" with the Schwarzschild chart as ##r \rightarrow \infty##, but of course that can't be true if these formulas are right. I need to consider this some more. :redface:
 
  • #75
DKS said:
You may want to reconsider your reasoning that ##t_r(evaporation) = t(evaporation)##.

No, the reasoning I gave in post #68 is still valid, though perhaps I didn't make it clear enough, hence the following.

First, that reasoning only involved events at finite values of ##r##, and at any finite value of ##r##, the difference between Painleve and Schwarzschild coordinate time is finite. Second, the reasoning was about the *difference* in coordinate time values between two events, the event where the far-away observer measures the mass of the hole to be ##M_0## (call this event M), and the event of the hole's final evaporation (call this event E). When taking differences in coordinate time values, the finite constant offset (at the finite value of ##r## where the far-away observer is) between Painleve and Schwarzschild coordinate time cancels out.

In other words, the formula you posted for the evaporation time as a function of ##M_0## is a formula for the *difference* in time between events M and E. The only wrinkle is that the far-away observer seeing the hole's final evaporation is delayed due to light travel time; the final flash of light has to get out to the far-away observer's ##r## from ##r = 0##, and that takes time, so the coordinate time the far-away observer assigns to event E will be earlier than the time he observes it (call the event where he actually observes the flash event O). But I showed in my post how the "adjustment" in coordinate time to get the time of event E from the time of event O must be almost the same for Schwarzschild and Painleve coordinates; so the *difference* in Painleve coordinate time between event M and event E will be almost the same as the difference in Schwarzschild coordinate time between those two events. So in practical terms, the formula you gave can be interpreted as giving the coordinate time between events M and E in either chart.
 
  • #76
PeterDonis said:
No, the reasoning I gave in post #68 is still valid, though perhaps I didn't make it clear enough, hence the following.

First, that reasoning only involved events at finite values of ##r##, and at any finite value of ##r##, the difference between Painleve and Schwarzschild coordinate time is finite. Second, the reasoning was about the *difference* in coordinate time values between two events, the event where the far-away observer measures the mass of the hole to be ##M_0## (call this event M), and the event of the hole's final evaporation (call this event E). When taking differences in coordinate time values, the finite constant offset (at the finite value of ##r## where the far-away observer is) between Painleve and Schwarzschild coordinate time cancels out.

In other words, the formula you posted for the evaporation time as a function of ##M_0## is a formula for the *difference* in time between events M and E. The only wrinkle is that the far-away observer seeing the hole's final evaporation is delayed due to light travel time; the final flash of light has to get out to the far-away observer's ##r## from ##r = 0##, and that takes time, so the coordinate time the far-away observer assigns to event E will be earlier than the time he observes it (call the event where he actually observes the flash event O). But I showed in my post how the "adjustment" in coordinate time to get the time of event E from the time of event O must be almost the same for Schwarzschild and Painleve coordinates; so the *difference* in Painleve coordinate time between event M and event E will be almost the same as the difference in Schwarzschild coordinate time between those two events. So in practical terms, the formula you gave can be interpreted as giving the coordinate time between events M and E in either chart.
That does not seem to be so. The coordinates for event M are ##(t,r)=(0,R)## in Schw. and ##(0-f(R,M_0),R)## in Painl. with ##f## the formula from wiki or the literature I quoted. For ##r>>M## ##f \approx 2(2Mr)^{1/2}##, it goes to ##-\infty## at ##r=2M##, then comes back up to 0 at ##r=0##. At event E ##M=0## and ##f=0## so in both charts E is labeled ##(T_e,R)##.

So in P. coordinates it takes ##T_e+f(R,M_0)## to evaporate, in S. coord. ##T_e##. But that means nothing, a coordinate is just a bookkeeping device. The S. evaporation time does have a physical meaning: it is the proper time for the far observer.

If I understand you correctly you say that if you now also would calculate the time in P. coordinates that it takes for a free falling observer to fall into the singularity, this will be less than ##T_e+f(R,M_0)##. This is clearly false on physical grounds if you just drop from ##r=R## for sufficiently large ##R## as he will never get even near the hole before it evaporates, so you clearly have to drop from sufficiently nearby but then I don't know how to compare coordinates at different ##r## for the dropper and the far observer. I know that if ##M## is constant the proper time to fall in is tiny compared to ##T_e## but since your time slows down if you approach the horizon, you should see ##M## decreasing faster and it's not clear to me who wins the race.

Can't we use Schwarzschild coordinates to compute at least the proper time it takes to reach the horizon, for the case of a slowly decreasing ##M(t)##? If ##M## is constant this is very easy: you find that ##r_o## reaches ##2M## in the limit ##t \rightarrow \infty##, but the limit of the proper time on the geodesic is finite. To compute what happens after that you have to use better coordinates, but if you don't care S. coordinates are just fine. So why can't we do this same calculation of the proper time to reach the horizon if ##M = M(t) = M_0(1 - t/T_e)^{1/3}## for the case of Hawking radiation?
 
  • #77
pervect said:
At one time, we had a discussion of the Krauss paper, and a rather technical rebuttal of it. I can't find the related thread, I recall that the authors noted the calculation for the evaporating hole was "non trivial".

See post #34 of this thread. I was the one who posted it in that other thread, and linked to it here again.
 
  • #78
DKS said:
So in P. coordinates it takes ##T_e+f(R,M_0)## to evaporate, in S. coord. ##T_e##.

Yes, this is fine; and the ##f(R, M_0)## "correction term" is much, much smaller than the ##T_e## term for a black hole of stellar mass or larger and any reasonable value for ##R##. For example, for the stellar mass black hole we've been considering, ##T_e \approx 10^{67}## years, and if we take a huge value for ##R##, something like the radius of the observable universe (which is about ##10^{23} M_0##), we get ##f(R, M_0) \approx 1## year.

DKS said:
But that means nothing, a coordinate is just a bookkeeping device. The . evaporation time does have a physical meaning: it is the proper time for the far observer.

True (at least to a very, very good approximation for the above value of ##R##). But Painleve coordinate time is the proper time for an infalling observer, so if it turns out that the evaporation time calculated above (which, as I've just shown, is essentially the same in both charts for any practical value of ##R##) is much, much larger than the Painleve coordinate time for the infalling observer to reach the horizon (which is the same as his proper time to reach the horizon and therefore has a direct physical meaning), then the infalling observer can indeed reach the horizon before the hole evaporates. See below.

DKS said:
This is clearly false on physical grounds if you just drop from ##r=R## for sufficiently large ##R##

But what *is* a "sufficiently large" ##R##? Have you calculated it? Obviously not, as we will see.

We have, from what I posted before, the infaller's proper time time for infall (to the singularity, since that formula is the one I actually posted, as I noted in some post or other recently), which is the same as the Painleve coordinate time for infall, ##T = 2M_0 \left( R / 2M_0 \right)^{3/2}##. For the same numbers I gave above, ##R \approx 10^{23} M_0## and a stellar mass black hole, this gives ##T \approx 10^{22}## years, which is indeed much, much less than the evaporation time.

So while it is, technically, true that for "large enough" ##R##, the infaller can't reach the hole before it evaporates, no value of ##R## within the observable universe is even close, by many, many orders of magnitude, to being "large enough". Put another way, there is clearly a *huge* range of ##R## values for which the infaller *can* reach the hole before it evaporates. (See further comment below on why time variation in ##M## does not affect the above.)

DKS said:
I don't know how to compare coordinates at different ##r## for the dropper and the far observer.

You don't have to. The infaller's proper time can be calculated in terms of the radius ##R## at which he starts falling, which can be taken to be the same ##R## at which the far-away observer is permanently located. That's what I just did above.

DKS said:
I know that if ##M## is constant the proper time to fall in is tiny compared to ##T_e## but since your time slows down if you approach the horizon, you should see ##M## decreasing faster

Only if you start falling at a large enough ##R## for the variation in ##M## to be significant during the time of infall. But as the above numbers show, the time of infall into a stellar mass black hole even for an ##R## the size of the observable universe is many, many orders of magnitude less than the evaporation time, so the variation in ##M## during the infall is negligible, as I've been saying all along.

DKS said:
Can't we use Schwarzschild coordinates to compute at least the proper time it takes to reach the horizon, for the case of a slowly decreasing ##M(t)##?

You don't have to; see above. But also see further comment below.

DKS said:
why can't we do this same calculation of the proper time to reach the horizon if ##M = M(t) = M_0(1 - t/T_e)^{1/3}## for the case of Hawking radiation?

I don't think this will work, even taking limits, in Schwarzschild coordinates, because ##t \rightarrow T_e## in those coordinates as the horizon is approached for *any* infalling worldline, so ##M(t) \rightarrow 0## is going to happen because of the distortion in the coordinates.

Also, as I commented before, I don't think this equation for ##M(t)## is an exact equation, even in Schwarzschild coordinates; I think it's just somebody's heuristic guess based on the formula for ##T_e##, which is also not an exact formula but just based on heuristic approximations. The heuristic approximations should work OK at very large ##r##, where the far-away observer is, but I don't know that they still work close to the horizon, and doing the sort of integral you are talking about requires relying on that formula for events close to the horizon.
 
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  • #79
PeterDonis said:
I need to consider this some more. :redface:

Ok, after considering and getting input from experts, I agree that the formula given earlier is correct, which means that the Painleve coordinate time ##T \rightarrow \infty## as ##r \rightarrow \infty##. So I was incorrect in using the ##r \rightarrow \infty## limit as I was using it before. (As I noted in a previous post, this means that there will be some sufficiently large ##r## for which an infaller indeed cannot reach an evaporating black hole before it evaporates; however, "sufficiently large" turns out to mean "much, much greater than the size of the observable universe" for a hole of stellar mass or larger, so in practical terms this possibility can be ignored.)

It's worth noting that there is still a sense in which Painleve coordinates "approach" Schwarzschild coordinates as ##r \rightarrow \infty##: the surfaces of constant Painleve coordinate time get closer and closer to being parallel to the surfaces of constant Schwarzschild coordinate time as ##r## gets larger and larger.
 
  • #80
PeterDonis said:
The heuristic approximations should work OK at very large ##r##, where the far-away observer is, but I don't know that they still work close to the horizon, and doing the sort of integral you are talking about requires relying on that formula for events close to the horizon.

On thinking this over, there's a dramatic way of seeing that the heuristic approximations can't possibly work close to the horizon. Consider a curve of constant ##t = T_e## in Schwarzschild coordinates; as we've seen, this curve *is* the horizon. But now consider this: ##M## is *not constant* along this curve of constant ##t##! It can't be, because ##M## can't be constant along the horizon, since the hole is evaporating. So looking at ##M## as a function of ##t## in Schwarzschild coordinates can't possibly be right. At the very least, in Schwarzschild coordinates, ##M## would have to be a function of ##t## and ##r##; but even that requires thinking carefully about how the ##r## coordinate is defined: the ##r## coordinate of the horizon has to change as you move along the horizon, but this change itself can't be a function of ##t##, since ##t## is constant along the horizon. (This, btw, is a better way of putting the objection I made earlier to considering ##r_g## as a function of ##t## in Schwarzschild coordinates.)

In principle the same thing applies to Painleve coordinates; it's quite possible that ##M## is not constant along a curve of constant Painleve coordinate time ##T## either. But it should be a lot closer to being constant along curves of constant ##T## close to the horizon, because close to the horizon curves of constant ##T## are close to being orthogonal to curves of constant ##t##. Certainly events along the horizon have different ##T## coordinates, so in principle ##M## along the horizon could just be a function of ##T##. However, I'll need to do some computations to investigate this further.

Of course this raises the question, is there a coordinate chart in which ##M## *is* always constant along curves of constant time? My initial guess is that there should be such a chart, but it might not be analogous to any of the "standard" charts. However, I also would like to take a look at Eddington-Finkelstein coordinates, since those are closer to the coordinates used in the Vaidya metric, which, as I've noted, explicitly includes a time-varying ##M##.
 
  • #81
PeterDonis said:
But it should be a lot closer to being constant along curves of constant ##T## close to the horizon

Thinking this over, it can't be right. Here's why: idealize the hole as spherically symmetric, and the outgoing Hawking radiation as successive spherically symmetric shells that move outward at the speed of light. At any given radius ##r##, an observer sees ##M## decrease slightly when each successive shell of outgoing Hawking radiation passes him. So a surface of constant ##M## must be a null surface "in between" two successive shells of outgoing radiation. But a null surface can't be a surface of "constant time", which must be spacelike, not null. So ##M## must change along any surface of "constant time" in any chart.

In fact, the above analysis suggests that ##M## should be a function of a coordinate that is constant along the outgoing null surfaces described above. This is basically what the Vaidya metric does, and the coordinates are basically outgoing Eddington-Finkelstein coordinates (the double-null version of that chart). So finding ##M## as a function of ##T## and ##r## in Painleve coordinates (or ##t## and ##r## in Schwarzschild coordinates) can be done by finding ##M## as a function of ##u##, the "outgoing" null Eddington Finkelstein coordinate, and then transforming between charts. I would expect that somewhere in the literature there is a paper where someone has done this, but I have not found one.
 
  • #82
PeterDonis said:
On thinking this over, there's a dramatic way of seeing that the heuristic approximations can't possibly work close to the horizon. Consider a curve of constant ##t = T_e## in Schwarzschild coordinates; as we've seen, this curve *is* the horizon. But now consider this: ##M## is *not constant* along this curve of constant ##t##! It can't be, because ##M## can't be constant along the horizon, since the hole is evaporating. So looking at ##M## as a function of ##t## in Schwarzschild coordinates can't possibly be right. At the very least, in Schwarzschild coordinates, ##M## would have to be a function of ##t## and ##r##; but even that requires thinking carefully about how the ##r## coordinate is defined: the ##r## coordinate of the horizon has to change as you move along the horizon, but this change itself can't be a function of ##t##, since ##t## is constant along the horizon. (This, btw, is a better way of putting the objection I made earlier to considering ##r_g## as a function of ##t## in Schwarzschild coordinates.)
Aha! I think you hit the nail on the head. To check that I understand let me say it in my own words.
For a far away observer a static BH is described naturally by the Schwarzschild metric, and you can measure the mass parameter ##M## in the manner you described in an earlier post. If the BH is static you can prove that the Schw. solution describes the geometry everywhere outside ##r=2M##.

Now I want to approximate evaporation and take Hawking formula to be correct. The radiated power is then computable and the far away observer can in principle measure ##M## every ##10^60## year and discover it slowly decreases. He can then model his region of spacetime by the S. metric with a slowly varying parameter ##M = M_o(t)##. But unlike the static case he can't use Einsteins equations to compute the rest of the geometry outside his immediate vicinity, because when you make ##M## time dependent you have a well-defined metric but is does not solve Einsteins equations. So all we can conclude is that the true geometry will have some function ##M(t,r)## and all we can say is that ##M(t,r) \approx M_o(t)## for large ##r##, but it's dependence on ##r## is not determined. To determine it you'd have to compute the backreaction of the Hawking radiation, i.e., the effective stress-energy tensor of the particle field and include that as a source term in Einsteins equations, a subject of several papers without definite consensus.

Before you do that calculation I don't believe you can show that an infalling observer must fall in. You argue that the ##t_r## in Painleve coordinates is proper time for the infalling observers, but this is only true if ##M## is constant.

I found a paper that claims to prove that for any rotationally symmetric backreaction stress-energy tensor, the horizon can never be crossed before it evaporates, more or less along the line of my reasoning: http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.2609.

It appeared in a peer-reviewed journal, so I assume it is not crackpottery. I did not find any refutation anywhere though.

I looked Ward's book on GR and Penrose's "Road to reality". Frustratingly they talk a lot about BH evaporation without showing that an observer can still fall in and hit the singularity before it evaporates. I'm starting to think that no-one really knows. If it was so obviously provable as you seem to believe, why would they not prove it?
 
  • #83
DKS said:
Now I want to approximate evaporation and take Hawking formula to be correct. The radiated power is then computable and the far away observer can in principle measure ##M## every ##10^{60}## year and discover it slowly decreases. He can then model his region of spacetime by the S. metric with a slowly varying parameter ##M = M_o(t)##. But unlike the static case he can't use Einsteins equations to compute the rest of the geometry outside his immediate vicinity, because when you make ##M## time dependent you have a well-defined metric but is does not solve Einsteins equations. So all we can conclude is that the true geometry will have some function ##M(t,r)## and all we can say is that ##M(t,r) \approx M_o(t)## for large ##r##

Yes, I agree with all of this (with the caveat that the metric with ##M(t)## slowly varying is an approximate solution of the EFE at large ##r##; the problem comes when you try to extend the solution to small values of ##r##).

DKS said:
but it's dependence on ##r## is not determined.

Not just from the above, no. But there might be other ways of figuring out, if not the complete function ##M(t, r)##, at least enough about its behavior to show that there are plenty of infalling trajectories that reach the singularity before the hole finally evaporates. See below.

DKS said:
To determine it you'd have to compute the backreaction of the Hawking radiation, i.e., the effective stress-energy tensor of the particle field and include that as a source term in Einsteins equations, a subject of several papers without definite consensus.

This is what you'd have to do to get a complete analytical solution, yes. (Although the solution would still be semi-classical, not a full quantum gravity solution.) However, I don't think you need to do that to show that an infalling observer must fall in. But I'll defer further comment on that until I've looked at the paper you linked to and some other references.
 
  • #84
DKS said:
I found a paper that claims to prove that for any rotationally symmetric backreaction stress-energy tensor, the horizon can never be crossed before it evaporates, more or less along the line of my reasoning: http://arxiv.org/abs/1102.2609.

On a quick read-through, I don't think that's what this paper is saying. What it is saying is that the BH can never form in the first place; more precisely (I'm rephrasing somewhat to put it in terms that seem to me to be clearer), in compact regions of spacetime where current mainstream theory says there is a BH, there isn't actually a BH; instead, there is a "quasi-BH" and a "quasi-WH" ("WH" for "white hole"), joined together so that there is never an actual horizon anywhere. (Fig. 7 in the paper shows what this means.) If there is no horizon, then of course no observer can ever cross one. (There is also no singularity, so no observer can ever hit one.)

Note that even if this paper is correct, the *reason* it is correct is not that I have been making incorrect deductions from the model I've been using; it's because the model I've been using is (if the paper is correct) not the right model. I.e., the mathematical description of spacetime I have been using (based on the Penrose diagram I referred to lo, these many posts ago--a similar one is given on the right of Fig. 2 in the paper) is not the one that is actually physically realized; what is physically realized is a *different* mathematical description, the one in Fig. 7 of the paper. Everything I have been saying would still be correct, as a statement about the mathematical model I have been working from; that model would just not be physically applicable.

I'm still working through the details of the paper's computation purporting to show the above, but one thing struck me at the outset: the author makes a point of noting that the "standard" BH model including Hawking radiation (which is the one I've been using, the one with the Penrose diagram I referred to before) violates the dominant energy condition. This is true, and is a well-known property of an evaporating BH, which is known to be necessary for the BH (i.e., an "actual" BH with a horizon) to evaporate. The author, however, views this as a reason to invalidate the standard model; he basically believes that no physically reasonable model can violate the dominant energy condition. So his model does not (and that's why it can't have any horizons in it; his model has "Hawking radiation" observed at infinity, but the only way a horizon can radiate is if the dominant energy condition is violated--at least, assuming that the semiclassical approximation is valid.)

It's worth noting, though, that the author's belief that the dominant energy condition can't be violated is *not* a mainstream belief. It is well known that quantum fields can fairly easily produce effective stress-energy tensors, in the semiclassical approximation, that violate this condition. (Indeed, the quantum fields used in the standard derivation of Hawking radiation from a BH horizon have this property, as they must given the above.)

As I said, I'm still working through the details in the paper, but it may well turn out that our disagreement in this thread is, as I noted above, a disagreement about which mathematical model is physically realized, not about the properties of a particular mathematical model; we can both be right about the properties of the particular models we are using, we are just using different models. So we may have to just leave it at that.
 
  • #85
After reading through the paper some more, I have a couple of additional comments:

(1) The argument in section B, that for a "classical" evaporating BH, an infalling observer (indeed, an ingoing light ray) can never reach the horizon before it evaporates, seems inconsistent to me. The metric being used is derived assuming the dominant energy condition; but a BH can only evaporate in the first place if the dominant energy condition is violated. This is not just a heuristic result; it's one of the classic theorems in BH physics, proved first (I believe) by Hawking & Ellis in their classic monograph. The theorem says that, if the dominant energy condition holds, the area of a classical BH's event horizon can never decrease. So this section of the paper appears to be talking about a scenario that is not possible. (The same would go for the brief section C that talks about generalizations of the section B argument to non-spherically-symmetric BHs; the theorem referred to above makes no assumptions about symmetry.)

(2) In the "quasi-BH plus quasi-WH" model in section D, a key item gets almost no discussion: the "Hawking-Unruh mechanism" that makes the quasi-BH "bounce" and turn into a quasi-WH. I haven't looked at any of the paper's references, so I don't know what sort of detailed mechanism is being considered here: but whatever it is, it must be a *large* correction to the standard model of gravitational collapse. The general nature of this correction should be to change the effective stress-energy tensor of the collapsing matter to something that can successfully resist collapse.

However, if the effective stress-energy tensor still obeys the dominant energy condition, it's extremely hard to see how it could stop the collapse, for a simple reason: the dominant energy condition basically says that ##\rho + p > 0##, i.e., the sum of energy density and pressure is positive, and that condition *increases* the chance of collapse. To decrease the chance of collapse, you need something like "dark energy" that can create a repulsive effect to counteract the attractive effect of the collapsing matter; and that violates the dominant energy condition.
 
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  • #86
PeterDonis said:
After reading through the paper some more, I have a couple of additional comments:
Thanks, I printed that and attached it to my copy of the paper.
 
  • #87
PeterDonis said:
##M## should be a function of a coordinate that is constant along the outgoing null surfaces described above.

Just to clean up this point, PAllen reminded me of two interesting references that bear on this. One is the paper refuting Krauss et al. by showing that semiclassical back-reaction effects cannot prevent horizon formation given some fairly general assumptions:

http://arxiv.org/abs/0906.1768

The other is the paper by Ellis (of Hawking & Ellis) arguing that black holes cannot completely evaporate when the effects of external energy falling in from the rest of the universe (such as the CMBR) are taken into account:

http://arxiv.org/abs/1310.4771

(Both of these papers, btw, present a picture of how Hawking radiation is generated that is quite different from the usual heuristic picture. They essentially argue that Hawking radiation is generated when matter collapses sufficiently rapidly to form a trapped surface, and it is generated just outside the collapsing matter, i.e., at an apparent horizon, *not* at the event horizon of the spacetime as a whole. This makes a *big* difference; as Ellis argues, it essentially means that most of the Hawking radiation emitted by a black hole goes into the singularity rather than escaping to infinity. This is a very interesting subject, but it's mostly not relevant to the question of how to find a function ##M(t, r)## that captures how the total mass varies in an evaporating black hole spacetime, so I won't comment further on it here except in one particular respect where it helps--see below.)

The key point that I take away from both of these papers is that even when using Vaidya metric-type coordinates, there is no way to make ##M## a function of just one coordinate throughout the spacetime. The argument I gave for why ##M## should be a function only of the outgoing null coordinate ##u## (which labels outgoing null rays) applies at large ##r## (which also means at "late times", since it takes time for outgoing null rays to reach large ##r##), but breaks down close to the horizon, because the horizon itself is an outgoing null ray, yet ##M## has to vary along it.

So what to do? The answer, close to and inside the horizon, is to instead look at *ingoing* null rays, which are labeled by the other Vaidya-type coordinate ##v## (each ingoing null ray is a curve of constant ##v##, just as each outgoing null ray is a curve of constant ##u##). Using the ##v## coordinate, events along the trajectory of the collapsing matter can be labeled, as well as events along the horizon (if a horizon forms, as we'll see it does), so we can construct a function ##M(v, r)## that works in the region of small ##r## where trying to construct a function ##M(t)## based on Schwarzschild coordinate time (or ##M(u)## based on outgoing null rays) breaks down. (If we wanted to construct a single function for ##M## valid throughout the spacetime, the easiest way would probably be to use double-null, i.e., Kruskal-type, coordinates, and make ##M## a function of ##u## and ##v## by finding a function ##r(u, v)## that transforms the ##r## coordinate into a function of the null coordinates.)

The specific form of ##M(v, r)## will depend on the details of the scenario, of course; but as the Padmanabhan paper shows, under fairly general conditions, even though ##M## may decrease during the collapse process (i.e., as ##v## increases from the value ##v = 0## that is assigned to the start of the collapse), it can't decrease fast enough to stop a horizon from forming. (The basic reason is that the rate of emission of Hawking radiation--here "rate" means "rate of change with respect to ##v##"--depends on the *speed* of collapse, so there is a tradeoff: decreasing ##M## slows the collapse, but that also slows the rate of emission of radiation and thereby the rate of decrease of ##M##, which prevents the collapse from slowing down enough to actually stop.) So there will be some ##v## (which will, in general, be of order ##M(v = 0, R_0)##, the original mass of the collapsing object, if I am reading the papers right) at which an event horizon has formed and we have a black hole. (One way of physically interpreting this is to say that, if we have an observer who stays behind at ##R_0## when the object starts collapsing and sends null rays inward and watches for their reflections back from the surface of the collapsing matter, there will be some proper time of order ##M(v = 0, R_0)## by his clock at which the null ray he sends inward catches up with the collapsing matter just as the horizon forms, so he never sees that ray reflected back to him. This works because the transformation from ##v## to the observer's proper time is linear, so if ##v## is of order ##M##, so is the observer's proper time.)

Once the hole forms, we can use ##v## as a time coordinate along the horizon, and we find that in terms of ##v##, things work pretty much as I described them before in terms of Painleve coordinates. An object that falls in from some radius ##R_0## at some ##v = v_0## will reach the horizon at a ##v## of order ##v_0 + M_0 \left( R_0 / M_0 \right)^{3/2}##, where ##M_0## is the value of ##M## that solves ##M_0 = M(v_0, r = 2M_0)##; whereas, if the hole does evaporate completely (which it might never do if Ellis' arguments are correct), it will do so in a ##v## of order ##M_0^3##, i.e., a much, much, much larger ##v## for a black hole of stellar mass or larger.
 
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