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OverviewEvery second of every day, black holes across the universe are eating light. Photons that have traveled millions of light-years, carrying the energy of dying stars and the information of distant galaxies, cross an invisible threshold called the event horizon and vanish. The black hole takes them in. And then what? That question sounds simple. The answer is one of the most contested, most consequential, and most thrilling unsolved problems in modern physics. In Photonic Digestion, astrophysicist Prof. Syrenne Aldemar-Owusu follows the photon on its final journey: from the moment it bends toward the black hole, through the photon sphere where light orbits in unstable rings, past the point of no return, and into the interior where spacetime itself ceases to make promises. With clear-eyed precision and the storytelling instinct of someone who has spent a career at the frontier, Aldemar-Owusu explains not just what happens, but why it matters so deeply that we do not yet fully know. The stakes are extraordinary. At the heart of this story is a conflict between two of the greatest theories ever devised: general relativity, which describes black holes and the geometry of spacetime, and quantum mechanics, which governs the behavior of photons and all matter at the smallest scales. These two theories agree on almost everything. They agree on almost nothing about what happens inside a black hole. And the disagreement, known as the information paradox, has forced physicists to question whether quantum mechanics itself needs to be rewritten. From the first direct image of a black hole captured by the Event Horizon Telescope in 2019, to the gravitational wave detections of merging black holes by LIGO that lit up the physics world, to the quantum field theory calculation that showed black holes are not truly black at all, this book traces the full arc of one of the greatest intellectual adventures in the history of science. It explains Hawking radiation, the photon ring, the firewall paradox, the island formula, and what holographic duality might ultimately reveal about the fate of every photon a black hole has ever consumed. This is not a book of comfortable analogies. It is the real physics, explained without condescension and without omitting the parts that are still genuinely unknown. The light went in. The universe is still figuring out what happened next. For readers of Kip Thorne, Leonard Susskind, and Carlo Rovelli. For anyone who has ever looked at the first image of a black hole and wanted to understand what they were actually seeing. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Prof Syrenne Aldemar-OwusuPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.279kg ISBN: 9798199249898Pages: 202 Publication Date: 30 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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