Small Black Holes Couldn’t Have Existed After the Big Bang – Or They Would Have Destroyed the Universe
by Dr. Alfredo Carpineti
September 9, 2024
Introduction:
(IFL Science) For several decades, scientists have toyed with the idea of primordial black holes. In the smorgasbord of particles and forces and energy of the beginning, slight overdensities might have led to the formation of small black holes. But not too small. Because under a certain limit, these objects would have wiped out the universe already.
This might appear counterintuitive if you imagine black holes are unstoppable devourers of matter. But black holes are mostly chill as long as you stay away from them. So how do these extreme objects cause the end of the universe? They might mess with the Higgs Boson. Scientists have now worked out a connection between the two and luckily got the reassurance of why we are still here.
The Higgs boson is the particle that gives everything in the universe mass. Mass as we know it is an interaction between the particles that make us, for example, and the Higgs field. We have proven its existence for just over a decade and current understanding suggests that it's in a metastable state. Potentially, its energy could be lower and that is a problem.
“If [the Higgs field] would suddenly change its properties then light particles could become potentially heavy or the other way around, and then physics forces, matter, masses will all change, and then the world around us would not be the same anymore. We might not even be there anymore to actually see it because we might just completely fall apart,” Dr Lucien Heurtier, from King’s College London, told IFLScience.
It is likely that this change would destroy the universe as we know it in a process called vacuum decay: a bubble of true vacuum – where the lowest possible energy for the Higgs exists – will expand and destroy the universe. Yes, that is definitely bad news, but there is also good news.
The article goes on to note that the Higgs field is apparently very stable, so we don’t have to worry about the consequences of a sudden change in its properties.
Read more of the
IFL Science article here:
https://www.iflscience.com/small-black ... se-75878
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