1. Introduction
We have previously [
1] shown that a black hole (BH) can be considered as a patternless [
2] bitstring of
fluctuating Planck triangles (FPT) carrying a binary potential
, where
c is the speed of light in vacuum, and having the Hamming weight of
active Planck triangles, where “
” is the floor function that yields the greatest integer less than or equal to its argument
x. Therefore, BHs are ergodic systems in thermodynamic equilibrium that define not only one unit of thermodynamic entropy [
3] (four FPTs) but also maximize Shannon entropy [
4]. We have also previously [
5] demonstrated that a BH can be modeled as a qubit in an equal superposition of its energy eigenstates, uniquely achieving three known bounds [
6,
7,
8] for the quantum orthogonalization interval. Thus, a BH is not only the sole
1 naturally occurring isolated quantum system but, as a qubit, it also represents a fundamental isolated quantum system.
Considering qubits and BHs within a single conceptual framework is known from the state of art (see [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18] for example). In this note, we show that a merger of two BHs, as expected, converts a separable two-qubit BH state into a single-qubit BH state.
2. Black Hole Hamiltonian
Consider a general
Hermitian Hamiltonian
expressed as a linear combination of the Pauli matrices
with
, a coupling energy
, and
being the identity matrix. The Hamiltonian (
1) governs the evolution of any qubit (we omit the irrelevant global phase in this study)
where the relative phase
,
, and
, by the Schrödinger equation
where the eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian (
1) are
, and
are their corresponding normalized eigenvectors, which are commonly referred to [
19] as stationary states, as under the Hamiltonian (
1) evolution they only acquire an overall numerical factor,
, where
ℏ is the reduced Planck constant. The average energy of the Hamiltonian (
1) is
and its variance of energy is
where the bra-ket terms
and
implicitly include the phase factor
of the qubit (
2).
It was shown [
8] that the minimum time needed for any quantum state to evolve into an orthogonal one, known as the quantum orthogonalization interval
, is achieved by a qubit (
2) in an equal superposition (
) of its energy eigenvectors (
5) with the average energy equal to the standard deviation (
) and the eigenvalues (
4) equal to
and
. In this case, the average energy (
6)
can be substituted into the variance (
7), yielding
and furthermore
implies the vanishing determinant of the Hamiltonian (
1)
yielding
,
,
, and
.
implies
, and furthermore the eigenvector
(
5) would be singular for
yielding
. Therefore, we set
, which bounds
, and links the qubit (
2) relative phase with the off-diagonal factor of the Hamiltonian (
1)
.
In our previous research [
1,
5], we have found that the only quantum system having a vanishing ground-state energy, only two possible states, and the average energy equal to its standard deviation and to half of its total energy is a BH. Namely, the BH average energy is the BH entropic work, that is, the product of the BH (Hawking) temperature and (Bekenstein) entropy
where
G is the gravitational constant,
is the Boltzmann constant, and
and
denote the BH mass and radius.
Therefore,
, where
is the BH energy and
represents the BH orthogonalization interval, that is the minimal period required for the BH qubit state
to evolve into the
state or
vice versa, which is inversely proportional to the BH energy. For example, the orthogonalization interval of the BH Sagittarius A* (
× 10
26 kg) is
× 10
−88 seconds, which is in the order of a squared Planck time (
× 10
−44 s), the smallest interval considered to have a physical significance in theories combining quantum mechanics and general relativity. The scalar product also evinces this tendency to orthogonality, where two nonorthogonal states
tend to orthogonality with the increasing size of the quantum system. Even toy examples involving just two nonorthogonal states hold some promise for shedding light on the foundations of quantum theory [
20].
Expressing the BH energy
as the product of temperature and information capacity (or entropy as in Equation (
10)) conceals the fact that both these quantities (
,
) can be stated as functions of the BH diameter (
), where
is the Planck length and
. However, such notation exposes the fact that the BH energy,
is a product of the number of FPTs on a BH surface and their energies given by the equipartition theorem for one degree of freedom (DOF). Hence, one DOF corresponds to one bit of information [
5]. The equipartition theorem was rigorously proven only for one DOF and under the assumption that the DOF energy depends quadratically on the generalized coordinate, which holds for a Planck area
on the holographic BH surface and the associated quadratic binary potential
.
Correspondingly, the qubit general Hamiltonian (
1) in the case of a BH becomes a continuum of complex Hamiltonians, parametrized by the BH energy and the unobservable phase
with a real, unit off-diagonal factor for
and an imaginary one for
. The unitary evolution operator of the Hamiltonian (
13)
implicitly introduces a
temporal parameter and associates it with a BH that represents a qubit
where the eigenvectors of the Hamiltonian (
13) (that can be expressed in terms of normalized eigenvectors
,
of the Pauli matrices
,
) are
3. Merging Two Qubits into One
Interferometric data
2 on collisions of celestial objects (called
mergers) indicate that the fraction of BH mergers is much higher than might be expected by chance [
21,
22,
23,
24,
25]. While we acknowledge the reality of gravitational events, we note that labeling them as
waves may be misleading: normal modulation of the gravitational potential caused by merging
objects should not be interpreted as a gravitational wave understood as a carrier of gravity [
26]. Furthermore, based on the gravitational event GW170817, it was experimentally confirmed [
27] that mergers are perfectly spherical. This is also an expected result as no
point of impact can be considered unique on a patternless, perfectly spherical BH surface.
If the Hamiltonian (
13) governs the evolution of one BH, then the evolution of two BHs
A and
B is governed by the general Hamiltonian of a two-qubit system
with
and
being the Hamiltonians (
13) of the individual BHs having energies
and
, and
being the vanishing Hamiltonian of their interaction, as they are independent. Each BH is associated with a unique orthogonalization interval
and
(
11). The continuum hypothesis ensures a unique fractional part of a BH surface
(too small to carry a single bit of information), and hence the uniqueness of any conceivable BH, regardless of the simultaneous existence of the same number of bits
on many BHs [
1].
The Hamiltonian (
17) has four eigenvalues
associated with four eigenvectors
Hence, the BHs
A and
B form a quantum system (we skip the BH subscript in this section) of two separable qubits (
15)
and the evolution operator
of the Hamiltonian (
17) is the tensor product of the individual evolution operators (
14), so their evolution is independent, preserving their separability.
The BH merger
M must convert two separable BH qubits (
20) into one BH qubit (
15) (
) and
Hamiltonian (
17) into
Hamiltonian
(
13).
A merger cannot trace out one qubit from the two-qubit system (
20), as partial trace applies to mixed states and time evolution, not directly to a Hamiltonian. Furthermore, partial trace models a measurement so that it would be tantamount to asserting that the BH
A is
observing the BH
B or
vice versa. But, BHs are qubits and qubits are not observers [
28,
29]. Having no interior, a BH cannot store any measurement information.
Therefore, the merger must reduce the dimension of the Hamiltonian from
to
by a projection of the Hamiltonian (
17) onto a two-dimensional Hilbert subspace spanned by two orthonormal states in the computational basis to extract the submatrix of
corresponding to the relevant rows and columns.
Three distinct projections of the Hamiltonian
(
17) exist. For the subspaces spanned by
and
for the subspaces spanned by
and
and for the subspaces spanned by
and
We must reject the nonorthogonal projections (
21) and (
22) as they allow the state transitions of one qubit while fixing the state of the other. For example, the projection (
22) of the Hamiltonian (
17) onto a two-dimensional Hilbert subspace spanned by
and
, allows for the first BH
A state transitions (
), while the second BH
B is fixed (
). This inconsistency is shown in the off-diagonal term
that does not correspond to the coupling energy
for
.
On the other hand, orthogonal projections (
23) seem not to preserve the form of the BH Hamiltonian (
13). However, we must not forget that we are crossing the singularity here: we merge two isolated, independently evolving, quantum systems
A and
B into a new isolated quantum system
M. Therefore, we should interpret a projection (
23) as the real part of the BH Hamiltonian (
13), that is as
for
. It is the phase
that will modulate the evolution of the new isolated system after the merger.
Furthermore, the subspaces spanned by
and
correspond to the two maximally entangled Bell states
and
, the superposition of which corresponds to the single qubit BH state, so the conversion
between the states (
20) and (
15) can be described as
Finally, the evolution operator of the Hamiltonian (
17) is the anti-diagonal matrix for
. However, only the orthogonal
projections of this matrix are unitary (respectively for
)
.
4. Conclusions
The qubit (
15) in equal superposition of two energy eigenstates, attaining the bounds for the quantum orthogonalization interval [
6,
7,
8], introduces the Hamiltonian (
13) that completely describes the BH dynamics [
19] and is parametrized by one observable parameter (e.g., the BH energy) and the unobservable, relative phase of the qubit.
Considering a binary BH as a quantum system of two independent qubits (
20) evolving independently under a common Hamiltonian (
17) we have shown that their merger can be considered in terms of orthogonal projection of this Hamiltonian onto a two-dimensional Hilbert subspaces spanned by
and/or
states that also correspond to the Bell states of this two qubit system (
20).
The relations (
24) and (
25) show that BH qubits must be orthogonal to merge. On the other hand, the orthogonalization interval (
11) is inversely proportional to the BH energy. We conjecture that this explains why mergers of massive BHs are the most frequently registered gravitational events.