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  4. What's a black hole made of?
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What's a black hole made of?

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Offline jarvisss

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #40 on: 08/10/2018 09:18:23 »
Quote from: Bill S on 05/10/2018 10:30:48
Hi Jarvisss, welcome.

You might think differently when you are 59. :)

Who knows :) Now it looks as a very attractive idea
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Offline jeffreyH

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #41 on: 08/10/2018 13:48:44 »
Quote from: Halc on 05/10/2018 13:59:22
Quote from: jeffreyH on 05/10/2018 13:47:15
I would hazard a guess that you would be dead before you reached your destination.
Only the little ones kill you before you get there.  One can cross the event horizon of a big one without even noticing.  OK, it will still kill you soon enough, but a similar death to being spun at a fatal RPM, which isn't the sort of way I'd choose to go out given a choice.

Answer to the OP then:  It would then be made of you!  You are what you eat.

What I meant was you wouldn't live long enough to reach a black hole if traveling from earth.
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Offline PmbPhy

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #42 on: 08/10/2018 18:12:20 »
Quote from: Pesqueira on 08/10/2018 03:12:50
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/10/2018 02:49:12
What does the "= 0" mean? Light can never be a rest, even near a BH.

Light at a BH is not traveling at the speed of light! It is not traveling at all, as it cannot escape the BH gravitational attraction. At rest it has 0 mass energy! lol
That is incorrect. Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at rest.
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Offline Halc

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #43 on: 08/10/2018 19:30:30 »
Quote from: jeffreyH on 08/10/2018 13:48:44
Quote from: Halc on 05/10/2018 13:59:22
Quote from: jeffreyH on 05/10/2018 13:47:15
I would hazard a guess that you would be dead before you reached your destination.
Only the little ones kill you before you get there.  One can cross the event horizon of a big one without even noticing. 
What I meant was you wouldn't live long enough to reach a black hole if traveling from earth.
Maybe I have a really fast ship.  I can get anywhere I want if I go fast enough.  Straight into Sagittarius A is within reach.  I'll still be alive when I get there even if everybody I left behind is long dead.  Not 30000 years dead either.  Weird (but not very interesting) way to achieve immortality.
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Offline Halc

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #44 on: 08/10/2018 19:35:39 »
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/10/2018 18:12:20
Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at rest.
Isn't it always going at c?  It's just that time dilates to 'stopped' at the event horizon, at least from an external POV.  It is a singularity, where light moves 0 meters in 0 seconds, which isn't stopped at all.  The speed is just undefined there, but c everywhere else.
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Offline geordief

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #45 on: 08/10/2018 19:41:21 »
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/10/2018 18:12:20
That is incorrect. Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at res
Does it follow from that that light slows down  (from an observer's perspective) whenever it goes into any gravitational well (eg the Sun) ?
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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #46 on: 08/10/2018 21:58:51 »
When traveling at the speed of light, time slows down and may even stop, the environment is at essentially at a 0 rest state. Now imagine an environment that is comprised of solely radiant energy. EM/Light and Gravity.
The environment is completely contained. Everything in regards to its characteristic attributes has been made homogenous.Gravitaional attraction is unaltered across the expanse of the containment, this is due to a monopole singularity, it has no wave structure only presence. Light trapped by this monopole's singularity gravitational force also is without a wave dynamic, because of the monolithic nature of the monopoles gravity (no waves). So, with no Light waves, there becomes no differentials between objects moving at different velocities passed each other, this eliminates time. With time eliminatated there is no measurement of distance, with no measurement of distance there can be no space.

This describes both a quantum environment and a BH! …… doing this buck naked! well almost! lol
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Offline yor_on

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #47 on: 09/10/2018 07:39:59 »
Another interesting question would be if light ever could have a geodesic towards a event horizon. After all, the closer you get to a possible 'center' the closer to that would the geodesic path be, if now something could be 'reflected'? And in the case where a center would be every/thing/where inside a event horizon the question wouldn't even exist, would it?

And I think Pete was thinking of a 'photon' from a far away observers perspective there.
=

Although maybe not? You can argue that 'photon' slows down by gravity, myself I think of it as following a geodesic path (using main stream physics) which hopefully keep it at 'c'. When one argue that is slows down, it should be relative a distance locally measured as well as ones local wrist watch,
« Last Edit: 09/10/2018 07:49:59 by yor_on »
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Offline evan_au

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #48 on: 09/10/2018 10:04:07 »
Quote from: Pesequeira
Light trapped by this monopole's singularity gravitational force also is without a wave dynamic, because of the monolithic nature of the monopoles gravity (no waves). So, with no Light waves...
This post seems to be suggesting that there can be no light waves within a black hole (ie no light and no photons)?

One tool used by physicists is the "light cone", a volume of space within which light could propagate in a given time.

And physicists are happy to draw light cones at any position outside a black hole's event horizon - and even extrapolate across the event horizon to predict what might happen inside the event horizon.

The results within the event horizon are weird to our eyes - for example, time and space axes appear to be interchanged.
- However, there is nothing that prevents light from propagating - providing it propagates towards the singularity at the center of the black hole
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_cone#In_general_relativity
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Offline PmbPhy

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #49 on: 09/10/2018 11:07:27 »
Quote from: evan_au on 09/10/2018 10:04:07
Quote from: Pesequeira
Light trapped by this monopole's singularity gravitational force also is without a wave dynamic, because of the monolithic nature of the monopoles gravity (no waves). So, with no Light waves...
This post seems to be suggesting that there can be no light waves within a black hole (ie no light and no photons)?

One tool used by physicists is the "light cone", a volume of space within which light could propagate in a given time.

And physicists are happy to draw light cones at any position outside a black hole's event horizon - and even extrapolate across the event horizon to predict what might happen inside the event horizon.

The results within the event horizon are weird to our eyes - for example, time and space axes appear to be interchanged.
- However, there is nothing that prevents light from propagating - providing it propagates towards the singularity at the center of the black hole
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_cone#In_general_relativity
Bee - eeee - ay - yutiful!
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Offline PmbPhy

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #50 on: 09/10/2018 11:12:19 »
Quote from: geordief on 08/10/2018 19:41:21
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/10/2018 18:12:20
That is incorrect. Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at res
Does it follow from that that light slows down  (from an observer's perspective) whenever it goes into any gravitational well (eg the Sun) ?

The coordinate speed of light does slow down in a gravitational field. Einstein showed this in is 1911 paper.

The proof is on my website here: http://www.newenglandphysics.org/physics_world/gr/c_in_gfield.htm

Note the references at bottom of page. This slowing down of light was demonstrated by Irwin Shapiro in the 60's.
« Last Edit: 09/10/2018 11:22:00 by PmbPhy »
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Offline Bill S

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #51 on: 09/10/2018 11:14:11 »
Quote from: Pete
That is incorrect. Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at rest.

Quote from: yor_on
And I think Pete was thinking of a 'photon' from a far away observers perspective there.

Although maybe not? You can argue that 'photon' slows down by gravity, myself I think of it as following a geodesic path (using main stream physics) which hopefully keep it at 'c'. When one argue that is slows down, it should be relative a distance locally measured as well as ones local wrist watch,

I’ve got another example of Zeno’s paradox.  The nearer I come to grasping these concepts, the more slowly I reach any sort of conclusion. 😊

Let’s see if I’ve grasped this.

An observer, falling into a BH, crosses the event horizon without incident and is then inside the BH.
A distant observer sees the infalling body as slowing to a standstill at the event horizon.

A photon, falling into a BH, crosses the event horizon without incident and is then inside the BH.
A distant observer sees the infalling photon as slowing, and never reaching the event horizon.

So, an assertion such as “A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there.” Applies only to the RF of the distant observer.  In its own RF (if it could be said to have one), or in the RF of the BH, the photon would cross the event horizon without hesitation.

Because relativity tells us that every RF has as much right as any other to be considered as “real”, the photon crosses the event horizon, and does not cross the event horizon; and both of these scenarios exist, physically, in our Universe.

Am I getting anywhere, or does Zeno still rule?
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Offline Bill S

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #52 on: 09/10/2018 11:24:05 »
Pete, my post crossed over with yours.  I followed your link and, as usual when I look at your maths, I was full of admiration, but lacking in understanding.  I’m not sure if it throws any light on my last question, or not. 

Dealing with a mathematical ignoramus must be frustrating, but I know from the past that you have patience.
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Offline Butch

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #53 on: 09/10/2018 13:52:58 »
Quote from: PmbPhy on 07/10/2018 01:10:39
All of that is wrong. Where did you get that idea from?
I will see if I can find a reputable link, in the meantime can you explain why you believe it to be wrong?

This should suffice!
https://www.astro.umd.edu/~miller/poster1.html [nofollow]
« Last Edit: 09/10/2018 14:12:04 by Butch »
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Offline Butch

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #54 on: 09/10/2018 13:57:18 »
Quote from: PmbPhy on 08/10/2018 18:12:20
That is incorrect. Light is always moving when going into a black hole. It's merely slowing down. A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there. Its sort of like Zeno's paradox. First its moving at c, then later at c/2 then c/4 then c/5 ....... At no time in that sequence is the photon at rest.
It does not slow down, it only appears so to an outside observer, black holes are really not that mysterious, they are simply bodies with an escape velocity greater than c.
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Offline evan_au

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #55 on: 09/10/2018 21:29:56 »
Quote from: Bill S
So, an assertion such as “A particle like a photon can always be moving towards the event horizon and still never get there.” Applies only to the RF of the distant observer.  In its own RF (if it could be said to have one), or in the RF of the BH, the photon would cross the event horizon without hesitation.
We start splitting hairs when we start talking about the behavior of a single photon as seen by different observers...

A single photon may cross the event horizon and enter the black hole (in which case the distant observer doesn't see it at all)
- Or a single photon may slingshot around the black hole, reversing direction so the distant observer can see it - but it does not enter the black hole.

I suggest that these thought experiments about things entering black holes are best described in the context of an observer falling into a black hole, who carries a beacon which is emitting photons in all directions. That way, you can talk about the viewpoint of the infalling observer, and the viewpoint of the distant observer, without having to divide a single photon into 2 parts traveling in opposite directions...
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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #56 on: 10/10/2018 00:24:48 »
Quote from: evan_au on 09/10/2018 10:04:07
Light trapped by this monopole's singularity gravitational force also is without a wave dynamic, because of the monolithic nature of the monopoles gravity (no waves). So, with no Light waves...This post seems to be suggesting that there can be no light waves within a black hole (ie no light and no photons)?One tool used by physicists is the "light cone", a volume of space within which light could propagate in a given time.And physicists are happy to draw light cones at any position outside a black hole's event horizon - and even extrapolate across the event horizon to predict what might happen inside the event horizon.The results within the event horizon are weird to our eyes - for example, time and space axes appear to be interchanged.- However, there is nothing that prevents light from propagating - providing it propagates towards the singularity at the center of the black hole

If you except that Light has a dual nature of wave and particle. You must question whether Light must be in a wave form within the gravitational force of a BH.  A vacuum is void of matter. 


"The photon has zero rest mass and always moves at the speed of light within a vacuum".


Is the area within a BH's gravitational force a vacuum? No. I would say that it is a densely compressed region of photonic energy sharing the same quantum time/space local. Photons becoming particles, forced by the BH's gravity to share the same quantum space/time location. At a point, this compression becomes finite to the point of creating actual Light mass, Light particle duality. Once Light achieves particle mass it no longer is capable of traveling at the speed of light, as it inversely increases it density it regards to velocity. Particle density blocks light. The active region surrounding a BH is immerse and continually growing. Light becomes visible when it hits mass. The area of visible Light around a BH is again immerse. The area of a BH is relatively microscopic compared to the outer regions of it's BH gravity. If light inside the BH's gravitational force was indeed traveling at the speed of light, the immerse area we see surrounding it would not be reflecting the incoming Light that we observe on the outside. If Light in the gravitational field of the BH was indeed moving at the speed of light, we would actually be seeing empty space  all the way to the BH's Event Horizon. But we don't !  lol.


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Offline evan_au

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #57 on: 10/10/2018 10:30:17 »
Quote from: Pesqueira
we would actually be seeing empty space  all the way to the BH's Event Horizon. But we don't !
In fact, at the time of writing, we (the public) have not seen a black hole at all, down to the event horizon or not.

However, over the past year or so, the Event Horizon Radiotelescope has been trying to image the black hole at the center of our galaxy. They have been crunching the numbers for months now, but I haven't heard an announcement, or seen an actual image.
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_Horizon_Telescope
Watch this space!

Quote
Is the area within a BH's gravitational force a vacuum?
The gravitational field of a black hole extends "to infinity". Most of this volume is a vacuum.

A black hole with a stellar companion will draw in gas to form an accretion disk. But the accretion disk is a fairly flat pancake, leaving most of the surrounding volume as a pretty good vacuum.

If you mean the singularity is not a vacuum, I would agree with you. But this is a miniscule volume at the center of the black hole.

Quote
At a point (within a black hole), this compression becomes finite to the point of creating ... Light particle duality
You don't need a black hole to create light particle/wave duality. You can demonstrate this at atmospheric pressure - or even in a vacuum chamber.

Quote
The area of visible Light around a BH is again immerse.
Are you talking about the luminous region of a black hole's accretion disk?
Nothing else about a stellar-mass black hole is visible (unless you can measure Hawking radiation with an effective black-body temperature of nanoKelvins).
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accretion_disk
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Offline Halc

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #58 on: 10/10/2018 13:22:48 »
Quote from: evan_au on 10/10/2018 10:30:17
Nothing else about a stellar-mass black hole is visible (unless you can measure Hawking radiation with an effective black-body temperature of nanoKelvins).
Even Hawking radiation originates outside the black hole, not from inside it.
The particles of the radiation come from gravitational energy, which is the only sort of energy that escapes and thus might reduce the mass of a black hole, so in that sense, it is the black hole itself emitting something, even if it changes form immediately beyond the event horizon.
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Offline Bill S

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Re: What's a black hole made of?
« Reply #59 on: 10/10/2018 14:19:02 »
Quote from: Evan
We start splitting hairs when we start talking about the behavior of a single photon as seen by different observers...

It’s easy to slip into talking about the “behaviour” if a photon, but, as I understand it, the only behaviour a photon exhibits is travelling.  Observation involves interaction, and interaction causes a photon to cease to be a photon.  The same must apply to a collection of photons. (?)
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