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Posted By: Bill No Information Loss in a Black Hole - 04/03/15 01:46 AM
A new study reported in Phys.Org:Black holes don't erase information, scientists say outlines the work done by Dejan Stojkovic, PhD and his team. They say that you can, in theory, recover the information that has been thought to be lost in a black hole. The paper studies the subtle interaction between particles of Hawking Radiation. According to the paper that interaction is driven by what was ingested by the blackhole, so that in principle the information could be recovered.

Bill Gill
Posted By: Orac Re: No Information Loss in a Black Hole - 04/07/15 11:54 AM
Again another example of the trash the science media has become with very few good science writers left. Leaves out probably the most important part of the whole story that you have to accept the Dejan Stojkovic view of the universe along with its Vanishing-dimensions.

Let me help:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanishing_dimensions_theory

With calculations its garbage in garbage out and perhaps if he spent more time showing the conclusiveness of the inputs, I might get excited about the output of the calculations smile

Originally Posted By: Charlotte Hsu
Disappearing information is a problem for physicists because it’s a violation of quantum mechanics, which states that information must be conserved.

Apparently, the scientific community has known of such correlating information for a while, but this is the first paper to flesh out the connection mathematically.

Yeah it has and I am not sure this paper adds anything to that understanding but his media writer made sure it got a good push and his name out there like this paper was important laugh
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