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11.06.2026 16:15

Big Bang inside a Star: How a Gravastar forms

Dr. Markus Bernards Public Relations und Kommunikation
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main

    The collapse of a star at the end of its life cycle could lead not only to a black hole but also to an ultra-compact star – a so-called gravastar – which resembles a black hole from the outside. This is the conclusion reached by two theoretical physicists at Goethe University. They have discovered a solution to the equations of Einstein’s General Relativity according to which the gravitational collapse of a star does not necessarily have to end in a black hole. According to their calculations, a new mini universe could form inside the collapsing star. The Big Bang would reverse the enormous gravitational forces and give rise to a gravastar filled with dark energy.

    FRANKFURT. Stars shine because atoms fuse in their interiors, releasing energy. When a very massive star has exhausted its nuclear fuel, radiation pressure can no longer provide sufficient counterforce to gravity. The star then collapses under its own mass until only a single point remains: the singularity.

    While the formation of a black hole appears plausible, black holes themselves continue to pose major challenges for science. How can ten billion solar masses concentrate on a single tiny point? How can spacetime be curved infinitely at that point, the singularity? At this stage, the laws of physics break down, making it impossible to predict what happens. Moreover, black holes conceal all information from observation: everything, including light, disappears irretrievably beyond the event horizon.

    Filled with dark energy

    It is therefore possible that black holes are in fact entirely different objects, such as ultra-compact stars, which cannot be seen because of their intense gravity and are therefore also called gravastars. In addition to ordinary matter present in their outer layers, they would be filled with dark energy, which exerts an outward pressure and stabilizes their mass, which wants instead to collapse. Gravastars are easier for physicists to accept than black holes because they do not possess a singularity nor an event horizon and, yet are almost as massive and compact as black holes. What had remained unclear, however, was how such gravastars could form in practice.

    The two theoretical physicists, Daniel Jampolski and Professor Luciano Rezzolla, have now presented for the first time a dynamic solution to the field equations of Albert Einstein’s General Relativity describing the collapse of a star that could lead to the formation of such a gravastar. The solution has shown that the collapse may trigger the creation of a mini universe inside the collapsing matter not very different from the Big Bang from which our universe has emerged. Like our own universe, its expansion is driven by dark energy. In this way, the expansion of the new universe counteracts the gravitational forces and halts the collapse of the star before a black hole can form. In this process, an equilibrium is established between the expanding mini universe and the collapsing matter and this equilibrium is what leads to a stable gravastar. With this solution to General Relativity, the Frankfurt physicists have provided the first answer to a question that scientists have been debating for 25 years: how do gravastars form during the collapse of ordinary matter?

    Room for new physics

    Daniel Jampolski, who discovered the solution in his master’s thesis supervised by Luciano Rezzolla, explains: “The Big Bang of the emerging universe can unfold once the star has already collapsed almost to the point of becoming a black hole.” The unresolved behavior of extremely compressed matter leaves room for new physics: “It is easier to imagine that the Big Bang occurs only at a very late stage, when matter has already been compressed to an extreme degree, thereby giving rise to new effects.”

    Rezzolla, Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics at Goethe University, adds: “Looking for alternatives to black holes should not suggest a skepticism towards black holes, which still represent the most natural and simplest solution to the fate of gravitational collapse. However, as scientists in general, and as theoretical physicists in particular, it is essential to maintain an unbiased approach towards what we do not know and hence explore both the accepted wisdom and the more exotic interpretations. History teaches us that it is not unusual for the latter to become the former.”


    Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

    Professor Luciano Rezzolla
    Institute for Theoretical Physics
    Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
    Tel: +49 (69) 798-47871
    rezzolla@itp.uni-frankfurt.de
    https://astro.uni-frankfurt.de/rezzolla/

    Daniel Jampolski
    Institut für Theoretische Physik
    Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
    jampolski@itp.uni-frankfurt.de
    Tel: +49 (69) 798-47873


    Originalpublikation:

    Daniel Jampolski, Luciano Rezzolla: Formation of gravastars. Physical Review D Letters (2026), https://doi.org/10.1103/c6lw-nx7k ; preprint archive: https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.15302


    Bilder

    Inside a gravastar: An expanding mini universe could counterbalance the collapsing matter of a star, thereby creating a stable gravastar.
    Inside a gravastar: An expanding mini universe could counterbalance the collapsing matter of a star, ...
    Quelle: D.Jampolski and L. Rezzolla
    Copyright: Goethe University Frankfurt


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    Inside a gravastar: An expanding mini universe could counterbalance the collapsing matter of a star, thereby creating a stable gravastar.


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