Superconductors may shed light on the black hole information paradox
Scientists are trying to understand what happens to information that falls into a black hole
LOS ANGELES — Insights into a black hole paradox may come from a down-to-Earth source.
Superconductors, materials through which electrons can move freely without resistance, may share some of the physics of black holes, physicist Sreenath Kizhakkumpurath Manikandan of the University of Rochester in New York reported March 7 at a meeting of the American Physical Society. The analogy between the two objects could help scientists understand what happens to information that gets swallowed up in a black hole’s abyss.