They are predicted by Einstein’s theory of gravity, and are most often mentioned in the context of ‘wormholes’, in which a black hole acts as the entry point to a tunnel through space and time, ending in a white hole somewhere else in the Universe. But this is deeply controversial, because Einstein’s theory predicts the existence of a so-called singularity at the centre of black holes – a state of infinite gravity which would prevent anything from passing through to the white hole on the other side.
However, some theorists think that a combination of Einstein’s theory and quantum theory points to a new way of thinking about white holes. Instead of being the ‘exit’ from a wormhole, they may be a slow-motion replay of the formation of the original black hole.
The process starts when an old massive star collapses under its own
weight and forms a black hole (see diagram, above). But then, quantum
effects occurring around the surface of the black hole halt further
collapse to a singularity, and instead begin to gradually turn the black
hole into a white hole that’s spewing out the original star matter
again. The process is mind-bendingly slow, though, so we may be in for a
very long wait to find out if white holes really exist.
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