That’s not how hawking radiation works. Basically some particle pairs will always form near the event horizon. Some halves of the pair fall inwards others escape the black hole. The escaping ones are lost mass for the black hole. This happens for all sized black holes at all times just that for small black holes it happens really quickly but bigger black holes it happens incredibly slowly.
It will takes trillions of years to evaporate any stellar sized black hole but all black holes evaporate all the time.
teft@piefed.social 15 hours ago
Since you seem to want to downvote me instead of go read an article to learn how wrong you are, here is the simple wikipedia page on hawking radiation:
https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawking_radiation
Nothing about heat of the universe because that isn’t a factor in Hawking radiation. You can go read the full page if you like but that also doesn’t mention heat of the universe.
Maybe don’t post so authoritatively on something you aren’t sure about. Spreading misinformation isn’t a good thing.
MotoAsh@piefed.social 14 hours ago
They still don’t evaporate because of the heat of the universe.
Maybe don’t be a dumbass quoting things you don’t underatand if you want to be listened to.