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It has always struck me as odd that light can't penetrate the event horizon
Firstly why apply a gamma correction?Do you know how the r parameter is derived and why?If instead of r we used an area this may relate better to entropy.That is the only advantageous change that I can see.
I'm sort of stuck on your formulation at first there btw"although proper time stalls at that location, it was already stalled in the case of light."What do you mean by that? The' proper time' as defined from a local observer at the BH, or as defined by a far away observer? The only proper time I know of is the local one, aka my wristwatch. And how did light become 'already stalled'?
Quote from: jeffreyH on 01/01/2017 15:45:27Firstly why apply a gamma correction?Do you know how the r parameter is derived and why?If instead of r we used an area this may relate better to entropy.That is the only advantageous change that I can see.Gamma correction is for relativistic mass. It comes from E^2=m^2c^4+p^2c^2.r is the radius as perceived by an infinitely removed observer.Entropy is a statistical concept. Not applicable for 2-body problem except perhaps when special relativity breaks down in the new metric at r=GM/2c^2.
Quote from: Mike GaleIt has always struck me as odd that light can't penetrate the event horizonIn my primitive understanding, light should have no problem penetrating the event horizon. From the viewpoint of someone falling directly into a black hole from a great distance, their velocity increases to above 10% of c before they reach the event horizon. Laser pulses emitted by this observer towards the black hole seem to be traveling at c away from the observer, as the observer falls all the way to the event horizon. Photons that strike the event horizon don't come back.From the viewpoint of an observer at a large distance from the black hole, they would see the above observer plunging into the black hole, and emitting laser pulses. Photons that strike the event horizon get swallowed by the black hole. They may see some delayed photons which have skimmed the edge of the event horizon, travelling around the black hole one or more times before escaping back to the distant observer. So light should have no problem being absorbed by the event horizon. Light just has a problem subsequently exiting the event horizon (which it does in an incredibly diffuse form, as Hawking radiation).
I'm still thinking about the kinetic and potential energies. That would have been a big oversight.It has to be something to do with the equivalence principle. Have you asked elsewhere?
Whatever do you mean by "light speed as perceived by an infinitely removed observer decreases asymptotically towards zero at the event horizon due to compression of space and dilation of time."
You need to read this.
Will do Actually, thinking about it as a 'slow time field' of sorts with our observer inside it, doing this 'two way mirror experiment'. How should I go about shrinking this patch of field, without shrinking the observer too? It reminds me of that alternative offered to a 'accelerating expansion' of the universe. A 'accelerating shrinking' of everything inside it instead, so to speak But if it shrinks then....