That 22ug blackhole is the lightest one and thus the one that decays the
fatest.That blackhole would decay in 10^-44s. But to create one, you'd have
the mass-energy of 10^19 protons in 10^-35metes, that is, a radius 10^20
smaller than 1 proton. That's quite a small cross section. So, the expanse
of energy to create one instead of a huge shower of particles is quite
huge, since a formation of one should be quite unlikely. I am not aware how
that would be done...

But, the Black Hole Stewart mostly refers to (when he is not talking about
the 22ug one) is a multi dimensional one, which would have a mass of
1-8TeV. 'Only' 1-8 thousand proton mass. Since it is an entity that does
not belong in GR or follows the usual quantum field theories, its
properties are quite unexplored. But, the creation of one  would still
require a huge number of fail attempts. And even if a certain mechanism to
create one, figuring out how it would interact with usual matter is a huge
unknown...

2012/8/21 Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <[email protected]>

>  This back to the 22 microgram BH. A grain of sand will fall. The only way
> to stop it would be to charge it and repel that charge. Absent significant
> charge repulsion, this thing would likewise fall through whatever, leaving
> a tiny hole. Very tiny. I don't know the size of such a black hole, but the
> thing would pass through matter sort of like a neutron, if it is neutral.
> Unlike a neutron, it would not bounce off of stuff.
>

-- 
Daniel Rocha - RJ
[email protected]

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