Physicists have coaxed a black hole’s most famous glow out of a strand of optical fiber and, for the first time, watched that light react back on the simulated black hole that produced it.

The result gives researchers a rare, hands-on look at Hawking radiation ‪—‬ the faint thermal emission that Stephen Hawking predicted should leak out of black holes ‪—‬ and offers a first clue about the tiny push that could, in principle, make a real black hole slowly evaporate, the research team said in a new study.

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