A lab-made Black Hole Presently gave us the Most Powerful Evidence yet for Hawking Radiation

Proposed by physicist Stephen Hawking back in 1974, Hawking radiation describes the small amount of high-energy radiation that might theoretically escape the gravitational pull of a black- hole.
The hypothesis goes against conventional wisdom that nobody, not even light, can escape a black hole, and now, for the first time, physicists have lastly observed hawking radiation - in a simulated black hole.
Just to be clear, Hawking’s hypothesis will remain presently that until we can really observe hawking radiation near a real-life black hole, but our technology is not almost advanced enough to do that right at the present.

Instead, physicists test their hypotheses on black- hole simulations shaped in the lab - based not on light, but on sound.
Proposed in the 1980s, but not really built till 2009, these acoustic, or 'dumb' black holes are shaped by cooling rubidium atoms to within a few billionths of a degree above total zero.
At this point, the atoms enter a quantum state of stuff, where they start to behave like clones of each other, clumping up to form a wonderful particle’, or wave, known as a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC).
Previous study has shown that these acoustic black holes - which also need a bunch of mirrors, lasers, lenses, and magnetic coils - do really mimic the behaviour of real black holes in some crucial ways, so are considered a pretty high-quality substitute. 
Jeff Steinhauer, a physicist at the Israel organization of Technology in Haifa, has been operational on his acoustic black hole for seven years now, and has finally perfect it to the point where he could precisely simulate how particles would behave on the edge, or event prospect, of his black hole. 
Incredibly, when he ran the trial 4,600 times, what he saw was exactly what Hawking had predict: pairs of phonons (packets of sound energy) started to impulsively appear at the event horizon, before one was propel away from the black hole and into pretend space, while the other was left to fall inside.
In case you require a bit of a refresher on Hawking radiation, the hypothesis is all wrapped up in an infamous difficulty in theoretical physics known as the black hole information paradox.
Hawking radiation propose that the Universe is filled with virtual entangled particle that blink in and out of existence and annihilate every other as soon as they come in contact - except if they happen to come into view on either side of a black hole's event horizon.
In this scenario, one particle gets swallowed up, and the other radiates left into space. 
Thanks to this escaping radiation stealing energy from the black-hole, the black hole loses mass over time, and finally evaporates out of existence - taking all the in order about what it swallowed with it.
So the paradox goes like this: according to Einstein’s universal theory of relativity, all matter that crosses the event horizon of a black hole is swallowed up eternally, and can never be retrieved. But according to our thoughtful of quantum mechanics, information about that swallowed substance can never be completely destroyed, so which one is right?
Earlier Present year, Hawking published a 'solution' to the information paradox, which hasn’t persuaded everyone in the field, but mostly suggests that black holes might actually have a halo of 'soft hair' surrounding them, which are able of storing information, so it’s not lost altogether. You can read extra about that here.
So currently back to Steinhauer and his team. After running their acoustic black hole trial for six days straight, the researchers took pictures of the BEC and showed that the phonons escaping were in information 'entangled' with the ones falling in. 
"We saw that high energy pairs were tangled, while low energy pairs were not," he told Sarah Griffths at Wired.
"We observe a thermal sharing of Hawking radiation, enthused by quantum vacuum fluctuations, emanating from an analogue black hole. This confirms Hawking’s prediction regarding black hole thermodynamics."
Steinhauer added that the particle exciting the event horizon generated so a great deal energy, the simulation also chains the firewall controversy - a separate hypothesis that suggests the flouting of the entanglement between the Hawking particle and their partners generates enough energy to make an real wall of flames at the edge of a black hole. More on that hypothesis here.

It will take a whole lot more replication and confirmation to show the results - some doubt that the BEC they've created is really a true BEC - and only direct observations from real black holes will put Hawking in the running for a Nobel Prize. But Steinhauer and his team could actually be on to amazing here. 
"You’re probing this feature of gravity that is very hard to probe experimentally with real black holes," Stephen Fairhurst, a professor at Cardiff University’s school of physics and astronomy, who was not involved in the study, told Tom Chivers at Buzzfeed.
"Quite how these things can teach us about quantum gravity I’m not certain, but that’s surely the after that goal - seeing how we can interpret this into relativity."

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