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The proper length is simply the proper time converted to a length by multiplying by c. Its physical meaning is that it is the arc length measured along a geodesic……….. (the proper length is of course always zero for photons).
How relevant is this to the idea that photons do not "experience" distance?
You cannot assume the position of a photon experiencing anything. The photon simply propagates.
We then need a reliable way of determining our initial distance from the horizon.
Quote from: JeffreyHWe then need a reliable way of determining our initial distance from the horizon.What about looking at the distortion of the distant starfield caused by the gravitational field of the black hole?If there were an accretion disk, you could use interferometry to measure the distance to the accretion disk.If there was no accretion disk, you could fire a laser tangentially at the black hole event horizon, and measure the delay before the light appears on the opposite side of the black hole, after being bent in a U-Turn around the black hole. Then do a lot of complex maths that is beyond me....
Jeffrey, it seems you have a lot of calculating to do before you address the time question directly. My suspicion is that you would have done most, if not all, of that before you asked the question. Alan's suggestions must (?) involve information from external sources. If you have access to such information, is it possible that a remote observer could tell you how far you were from the EH?
From my point of view, outside the EH, you never reach it.No calculation needed.
From my point of view, outside the EH, you never reach it.
So a distant observer would never see you actually reach the event horizon - but it would look very much like you had hit the event horizon and disappeared from sight.
Are you saying that assertions such as: "To an outside observer any object approaching the Schwarzschild radius appears to take an infinite time to penetrate the event horizon", are incorrect, because the object would vanish before, in the observer's RF, it reached the EH?