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It can pop up in some situations. A singularity has a volume of zero, does it not? Now say you want to calculate the energy density there.
It can pop up in some situations. A singularity has a volume of zero, does it not? Now say you want to calculate the energy density there.
It can pop up in some situations. A singularity has a volume of zero, does it not? Now say you want to calculate the energy density there.
After a black hole forms, all the mass is compressed into a central point, called the singularity, which is infinitely dense. However to find the density needed to form a black hole divide the mass of the collapsing star by the volume enclosed by the event horizon.
In a black hole space and time are so distorted that ordinary rules of geometry, such as the formula for the volume of a sphere, do not technically apply. However this order of magnitude calculation will ignore that technical detail. The formula for the volume of a sphere of radius, R, is V=(4/3)piR^3. So a sphere of radius 3000 meters will have a volume of about 1e11 meters^3.
Density is the mass divided by the volume. Dividing the mass of the Sun, 2e30 kilograms, by this volume gives the density to which a solar mass star would need to be compressed to form a black hole. This gives the density of a black hole as about 2e19 kilogram/meter^3.
Using Einstein's mass energy equivalence formula, E=mc^2, the mass of 2e30 kilograms is equivalent to an energy of about 2e47 joules. Dividing this energy by the volume gives the energy density needed to form a solar mass black hole, which is 2e36 joules/meter^3.
What my math professor said is that there are two possible results for dividing by zero: negative infinity (I.E. it goes forever in the negative direction) and positive infinity (I.E. it goes forever in the positive direction) depending on how you do the calculation.
No, for something to exist it must have a volume greater than zero. It could be the size of an atomic particle and would still have volume.
Since zero is conceptually the inverse of 'infinity', zero inherits the conceptual nature of infinity.
Zero, imo, is more of a concept than a number since 'infinity' is a definite concept and definitely not a number. Since zero is conceptually the inverse of 'infinity', zero inherits the conceptual nature of infinity.
It always bugs me when people say a function "approaches infinity".
NO. IT CAN'T APPROACH A CONCEPT. IT INCREASES WITHOUT BOUNDS.
But interestingly I don't think saying a function "approaches zero" is logically incorrect.
That's great about the common misconception that dividing something by zero yields infinity. It means that if you give your pie to nobody, you have an infinite amount of pie!Why would you ever want/need to divide by zero? If you have 10 slices of pie but nobody wants pie then you have no need of doing any division.
A physical singularity is defined by the invalidity of classical (or even general relativist) physics though, so I don't know if the common formula for energy density even applies (I think it's generally treated as if the energy density approaches infinity - it's a limit situation again in the end).It can pop up in some situations. A singularity has a volume of zero, does it not? Now say you want to calculate the energy density there.
I think it is wrong to think of zero as the inverse of infinity. Mathematically, they aren't even inverses of each other.Zero, imo, is more of a concept than a number since 'infinity' is a definite concept and definitely not a number. Since zero is conceptually the inverse of 'infinity', zero inherits the conceptual nature of infinity.
It always bugs me when people say a function "approaches infinity".
NO. IT CAN'T APPROACH A CONCEPT. IT INCREASES WITHOUT BOUNDS.
But interestingly I don't think saying a function "approaches zero" is logically incorrect.
I'm a little confused by this because if I select zero as the numerator I could also conclude that 1=2=3=4, yet this is allowed.
0/0 = 0 as far as I know, because dividing nothing by nothing just leaves nothing.
Scientific curiosity. There's a piece of every scientist that wants to see if we really CAN rip a hole in reality using the LHC......Why would you ever want/need to divide by zero? If you have 10 slices of pie but nobody wants pie then you have no need of doing any division.
That assumes that mathematics is a property of the world around us we can put to the test, when instead it is a logical model derived from certain axioms (which can then be used to model the world under certain circumstances). We wanted the numbers we usually do maths with to have certain properties under certain operations, and these wouldn't hold anymore if we allowed division by zero to have a result (respectively, assigning a result to division by zero would lead to a contradiction).Scientific curiosity. There's a piece of every scientist that wants to see if we really CAN rip a hole in reality using the LHC......![]()