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The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss

Carlo Rovelli: From Dante to White Holes

The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss

Lawrence M. Krauss

Science, Natural Sciences, Physics

4.4592 Ratings

🗓️ 3 November 2023

⏱️ 144 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Carlo Rovelli is well known as a popularizer of science. His short book, Seven Brief Lessons on Physics, was an international bestseller. I have known Carlo as a physicist ever since he used to visit my Physics Department colleague, Lee Smolin, at Yale, when I was a Professor there. Carlo and Lee were part of a small group of physicists pioneering an idea called ‘Loop Quantum Gravity’ as a way to try and unify General Relativity and Quantum Mechanics. Less well known among the public than its chief competitor, String Theory, and also less popular among physicists as a whole, Loop Quantum Gravity is nevertheless an equally serious attempt to address the vexing paradoxes associated with of quantizing General Relativity.

Black Holes are the place in physics where the various problems of quantum gravity become manifest. If Stephen Hawking was correct, and black holes do completely evaporate through quantum processes that result in the emission of thermal radiation, then it appears that the information about what fell into the black hole in the first place will be forever lost. But this violates a central feature of quantum mechanics, which preserves information. At the same time, the final state of classical black hole collapse involves a singularity of infinite density. Most physicists expect this singularity to be removed in a quantum theory of black holes.

Rovelli argues that near the singularity of a black hole quantum processes can change a black hole to be a ‘white hole’, the time reversed version of a black hole. While anything that falls into a black hole stays there, everything inside a white hole eventually reappears. If Carlo’s ideas were correct, they could go a long way toward potentially resolving black hole paradoxes.

It is a big ‘If” however, and I remain skeptical. Nevertheless I wanted to discuss these ideas with Carlo on this podcast for a variety of reasons. First, any such discussion will illuminate a lot about the physics of black holes. Secondly, I think it is useful for laypeople to listen to physicists debate and discuss ideas at the forefront, presenting challenges to each other, being willing to openly question, and doing all of this with a sense of mutual respect.

At the same time, because I share Carlo’s great interest in both popularizing science, as well as connecting science and culture, I was extremely interested in discussing his motivations and thoughts about these important areas, and I was not disappointed. I hope listeners will find our discussions about science, literature, and politics equally enlightening.

As always, an ad-free video version of this podcast is also available to paid Critical Mass subscribers. Your subscriptions support the non-profit Origins Project Foundation, which produces the podcast. The audio version is available free on the Critical Mass site and on all podcast sites, and the video version will also be available on the Origins Project Youtube channel as well.



Get full access to Critical Mass at lawrencekrauss.substack.com/subscribe

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, and welcome to The Origins Podcast.

0:11.0

I'm your host, Lawrence Krause.

0:13.0

Carlo Ravelli is well known throughout the world for his popular science writing.

0:17.0

His book, Seven Brief Lessons on Physics was a runaway bestseller.

0:21.4

It's a very brief book talking about a variety of ideas in modern physics.

0:25.1

It came out of articles he wrote for an Italian newspaper, and he's written numerous small, short monographs on different areas of physics that have captured the public's imagination, not least because he loves to introduce ideas from

0:37.6

literature, in particular, in art, into his discussions of physics.

0:44.0

Now, I've known Carlo for a long time as a physicist.

0:47.4

Back from way back when I taught at Yale University, he would come and visit as a collaborator

0:52.3

of my then colleague Lee Smullen.

0:55.2

And they were talking in the nascent stages about ideas that a group of physicists have been exploring

1:01.3

called Loop Quantum Gravity, which is an alternative to string theory as a potential theory

1:07.1

of quantum gravity. It's caught on less among physicists and among the public than string

1:12.7

theory, but nevertheless, it's a serious attempt to deal with many of the problems and paradoxes

1:18.0

associated with developing quantum theory of gravity. And that's particularly relevant for

1:22.4

the new book that he's just written, called White Holes. I wanted to talk to Carlo about that, but it also gave

1:28.4

me a chance in this podcast to have a discussion about his early life and what got him interested

1:33.3

in science and literature in particular, and also politics, which I hadn't realized he was quite

1:37.9

very interested in as a young person. So we had a fun discussion there and then and then talked about

1:44.8

loop quantum gravity where it came from and how it's where it's going. And that allowed us to move

1:50.2

into the idea of white holes. Now black holes are among the most exotic objects we know in physics.

1:56.8

And they present various paradoxes. Things fall into a black hole, nothing comes out, but if they evaporate by quantum processes,

...

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