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Advanced Topics}Schwarzchild Radius

Using quite a bit of handwaving, the current author has seen an astrophysicist derive the Schwarzchild Radius (radius at which the curvature of space mooches and eats up light completely) via 1/2 m c^2 = G M m/r. (The guy totally neglected relativity, assuming that kinetic energy has the same form in the relativistic regime, but anyway...)

Handwaving like a good astrophysicist, one finds that r = 2 G M/c^2 \approx 2\times 7E-11 \times 6E24/9E16 = 1 cm.

(Note: the author is currently declared as an astrophysics major, and if the above comment is to be interpreted as pejorative towards astrophysicists, then she has thus implicitly insulted herself.)

See below for user comments and alternate solutions! See below for user comments and alternate solutions!
Alternate Solutions
elgo
2017-10-18 03:15:42
To get the answer exactly you need to know the Schwarzchild radius is at R=2GM. This means for there to be a blackhole, all of the mass has to be inside that radius. To convert G to general relativity units you need to divide it by c^2. When you put in the values for the constants, you\\\\\\\'ll get the right answer of 1cm.Alternate Solution - Unverified
daverbeans
2008-11-06 12:49:13
A really quick and dirty way to do this is to consider the radius of a "stellar mass" black hole, which is about 10 solar masses. These are around 30km in radius. The sun is approximately 3x10^5 earth mass. A stellar mass black hole would then be 3x10^6 earth masses. so 30km/3x10^6 is on the order of .01m or 1cm. Alternate Solution - Unverified
scottopoly
2006-11-03 19:55:34
I once heard that if the Earth were compressed into a black hole, it would be about the size of a grape. I think that is a much faster solution. ;)Alternate Solution - Unverified
ben
2006-11-03 15:21:30
i've generally seen the schwarzchild radius derived from the escape velocity as shown in

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/SchwarzschildRadius.html
Alternate Solution - Unverified
Comments
enterprise
2018-04-01 16:17:05
It is just an order of magnitude calculation. escape velocity=speed of light. You can write this as 2*c=G+M-R. Every term is an order of magnitude. Take the equation and apply the logarithm on both sides. For example , M=9*10^24 so just set M=25 in the above equation. NEC
elgo
2017-10-18 03:15:42
To get the answer exactly you need to know the Schwarzchild radius is at R=2GM. This means for there to be a blackhole, all of the mass has to be inside that radius. To convert G to general relativity units you need to divide it by c^2. When you put in the values for the constants, you\\\\\\\'ll get the right answer of 1cm.Alternate Solution - Unverified
keradeek
2011-10-01 21:32:38
well, I think the handwaving shown in the official solution is a bunch of crap, cuz energy is gamma*m*v^2, not 1/2. That's like saying the Bohr model of the atom is really informative as to what's going on, cuz it gets the right answer.
keradeek
2011-10-01 21:33:16
gamma*m*c^2, sorry
NEC
pam d
2011-09-17 19:06:43
I think down below evanb was the only one who gave a solution that involves general relativity. The Schwarzchild radius is R = 2M (unfortunately knowing this is a combination of what courses you have taken and/or a bit of luck) in c = 1, G = 1 units. You then figure out in SI you need a factor of \frac{G}{cc}, simplify the algebra by using G = 7E-11 and M = 6E24, and arrive at about 1 cm.

That being said, I really like the plucky handwaving solutions. They demonstrate the type of thinking that will get you some extra points on this test. My favorite is the grape one.
NEC
aqme28
2010-11-12 14:35:17
This is a pretty poor solution, but in this case it works:

I realized the units of G are m^3/(kg*s^2)
Multiply G*M/R and you get units of (m/s)^2.

So by dimensional analysis I figured v is about the square root of GM/R
I got 4 millimeters, which is close enough to a centimeter.
NEC
1234
2010-09-03 11:34:19
Set escape velocity = c:
Escape velocity = [(2*G*M)^(1/2)]/r = c. Solve for r.
x3818919209145
2010-11-11 06:30:12
Doesn't the r have to go inside the square root?
NEC
daverbeans
2008-11-06 12:49:13
A really quick and dirty way to do this is to consider the radius of a "stellar mass" black hole, which is about 10 solar masses. These are around 30km in radius. The sun is approximately 3x10^5 earth mass. A stellar mass black hole would then be 3x10^6 earth masses. so 30km/3x10^6 is on the order of .01m or 1cm.
Baharmajorana
2014-09-16 01:46:35
I like your solution, but we have to memorize the radius and mass of black hole!! I think the GREPHYSICS's solution is better.
Alternate Solution - Unverified
ivalmian
2008-03-25 19:42:17
Um, well, the reason it's called the Schwarzschild radius is that it comes from Schwarzschild's solution of Einstein's equations. Take a look:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deriving_the_Schwarzschild_solution
NEC
bat_pesso
2007-10-31 13:50:31
i don't think relativity is such an issue here, the escape velocity depends only on the mass of the earth, not on the mass of the particle.

thus 0.5c^2 is still GM/R
NEC
Jeremy
2007-10-18 13:17:00
Not having seen such hardcore hand waving before, I would not feel comfortable with this solution even if I had thought of it. Looking in my books afterwards, I found something that's pretty cool: you can get r \prop G M/c^{2} from dimensional analysis! (Of course you have to pick the right parameters.) And check this out, G M/c^{2}=4.4 mm, so unless the proportionality factor is several orders of magnitude, the closest answer is (C).

Moral: If thou needeth formulae, consulteth dimensional analysis. I think I gave up on this problem too quickly, when I could have at least submitted an educated guess.
NEC
chri5tina
2006-11-28 05:24:22
So in all this handwaving, did he explain the 1/2?
chri5tina
2006-11-28 05:32:11
well, I answered my own stupid question, however I'm hitting a bug when I try to edit my above post. I get this error when I try to edit:

omg are you trying to edit someone else's comment, you phisher?! (if you're innocent, then you ought to remember to login.)

when I am already logged in. and I'm not sure where to submit bugs.
Answered Question!
scottopoly
2006-11-03 19:55:34
I once heard that if the Earth were compressed into a black hole, it would be about the size of a grape. I think that is a much faster solution. ;)
Nebula
2015-09-16 22:29:35
I heard marble, but still works!
Alternate Solution - Unverified
ben
2006-11-03 15:21:30
i've generally seen the schwarzchild radius derived from the escape velocity as shown in

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/SchwarzschildRadius.html
Alternate Solution - Unverified
pablojm
2006-10-28 15:30:36
This is a good argument to convince someone who doesn't know physics, but how do you know it works...?
evanb
2008-07-01 17:22:24
Unfortunately, the way would know it works is by doing the general relativity. You can deduce that in the Schwarzschild metric for a point mass, any timelike or null (lightlike) trajectory (ie. any trajectory that a particle might take) that starts within R = 2M will ever wind up outside of R = 2M ( G = c = 1).

Un-unfortunately, GR reproduces lots of "Newtonian" results. You can even do most cosmology with Newtonian math. Why does that work? Because someone did it fully-general-relativistically and found that the math wound up the same...
Answered Question!

Post A Comment!
You are replying to:
I think down below evanb was the only one who gave a solution that involves general relativity. The Schwarzchild radius is R = 2M (unfortunately knowing this is a combination of what courses you have taken and/or a bit of luck) in c = 1, G = 1 units. You then figure out in SI you need a factor of \frac{G}{cc}, simplify the algebra by using G = 7E-11 and M = 6E24, and arrive at about 1 cm. That being said, I really like the plucky handwaving solutions. They demonstrate the type of thinking that will get you some extra points on this test. My favorite is the grape one.

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