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I'm trying to find out if black holes could be created by focusing enough light into a small enough volume.

So far I have found (any or all may be incorrect):

  • Maxwell's equations are linear, dictating no interaction of radiation.
  • The Kerr effect and self-focusing has been observed in mediums, but not vacuums.
  • Masses bending light have been observed per general relativity.
  • Photons are said to have no rest mass, just energy and momentum (???).
  • General relativity seems to provide for energy to energy interaction.

This leads to a more specific question:

Does electromagnetic radiation or energy curve space like mass curves space?

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  • $\begingroup$ Based on this equation for critical energy density, does it follow that the entire energy output of our sun concentrated into a cubic micrometer wouldn't even come close to collapsing? $\endgroup$
    – droud
    Commented Aug 28, 2011 at 16:42
  • $\begingroup$ The answer is yes, and it is obvious. Mathematicians have recently made a small industry of rigorously proving it by complicated methods, but the methods are not insightful. $\endgroup$
    – Ron Maimon
    Commented Aug 28, 2011 at 20:45

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The answer to your first question is yes.

Building on Demetrios Christodoulou's seminal work showing that black holes can form "generically" from focusing of gravitational waves starting from an initial space-time that is arbitrarily close to flat, Pin Yu has recently shown that one can also dynamically (and generically, in the sense that the formation is stable under small perturbations) form a black hole starting with only electromagnetic waves.

Of course, the interaction between electromagnetism and gravity means that as soon as you set the thing in motion, you will pick up gravitational radiation. And also that since a precise covariant notion of local gravitational energy is not available, the idea that the space-time starts out with only electromagnetic waves is a specific, frame dependent mathematical definition; one should keep that in mind before trying to draw too much physical significance out of the casual statement of the theorem.

For your specific second question, the answer is also yes. Einstein's equation specifies that $$ G_{\mu\nu} = T_{\mu\nu}$$ the left hand side, the Einstein tensor, is purely geometrical, and reflects the curvature of space-time. The right hand side comes from the energy-momentum contributions from the matter fields. The standard way of coupling electromagnetic waves to general relativity (Einstein-Maxwell theory) gives that the right hand side is zero only when the electromagnetic field vanishes. So the content of Einstein-Maxwell theory is based on that electromagnetic radiation can curve space-time.

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  • $\begingroup$ -1: (I hate Christodoulou's methods) This is not great as a physics answer, because both results are ridiculously obvious as physics. They are marginally less obvious as mathematics, but there was no doubt, before Christodoulou, that radiation produces black holes. $\endgroup$
    – Ron Maimon
    Commented Aug 28, 2011 at 20:59
  • $\begingroup$ You don't need anything this fancy to answer the question. The Vaidya metric does the job: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaidya_metric $\endgroup$
    – user4552
    Commented Jan 28, 2019 at 4:20
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In general relativity, the quantities that can act as sources of spacetime curvature are the ingredients of the energy momentum tensor. There is a nice diagram of these ingredients in the Wikipedia article.

Since radiation has such attributes (energy, momentum etc), it can act as a source for the gravitational field.

Edit: I seem to have omitted the very first part of your question. See the discussion here about whether or not there is a "critical energy density" which determines black hole formation.

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