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The solution is that the light never quite reaches the event horizon, but slows down to a near halt.
By the time the front of the laser beam intersects the event horizon, the beam is infinitely blueshifted. The light beam will contain infinitely many wave cycles. This means that, before the front of the beam reaches the event horizon, the laser must generate a sequence of infinitely many wave cycles. Before the front of the light beam can reach the event horizon, infinite time must pass at the laser.
The solution is that the light never quite reaches the event horizon, but slows down to a near halt. The same applies to matter falling in - during the entire lifetime of the universe, that material never reaches the event horizon (unless the event horizon moves further out if the black hole expands). The calculations that suggest that objects can cross the event horizon (and that light crosses it too) are based on the idea that clocks never really slow down, so objects are imagined to go on falling through the event horizon from their own point of view and continue on down to a singularity, b
You're wrong about light dilation. Light traveling from a point at higher gravitational energy to lower is blue shifted. It happens between Earth orbit and Earth's surface. It has nothing to do with any singularity.
That very much depends on your perspective.It's true from outside the hole.But not true for the observer falling in.
The same applies to matter falling in - during the entire lifetime of the universe, that material never reaches the event horizon (unless the event horizon moves further out if the black hole expands).
Quote from: David Cooper on 14/11/2018 23:23:07The same applies to matter falling in - during the entire lifetime of the universe, that material never reaches the event horizon (unless the event horizon moves further out if the black hole expands). If nothing ever falls in, how can it expand?
Quote from: David Cooper on 14/11/2018 23:23:07The solution is that the light never quite reaches the event horizon, but slows down to a near halt.Yes, this seems like the only explanation. The only thing it doesn't explain is why people think black hole event horizons can exist.
There is a difference between information going into a black hole and information coming out. The escape velocity at the horizon equals the speed of light and points away from the centre of gravity. The clue is in the word escape. Things approaching the horizon will not slow down. Only the signals coming out from those objects slow down.
This nonsense about objects never reaching the horizon needs to be shut down. It is simply wrong.
Gravity accelerates objects towards the source. It certainly doesn't slow them down. It is the information sent out by the infalling objects that may give this impression.
The change to an infinite blue shift happens at the singularity in the middle; not at the EH.
The solution is that the light never quite reaches the event horizon, but slows down to a near halt. The same applies to matter falling in - during the entire lifetime of the universe, that material never reaches the event horizon (unless the event horizon moves further out if the black hole expands). The calculations that suggest that objects can cross the event horizon (and that light crosses it too) are based on the idea that clocks never really slow down, so objects are imagined to go on falling through the event horizon from their own point of view and continue on down to a singularity, but this could only happen after more than an infinite amount of time has gone by for the rest of the universe, which means there are no singularities yet and that all the stuff falling towards a black hole centre is frozen in place at the same distance from the centre as it was when it stopped at where the event horizon was at the time it stopped there. The black holes should evaporate away (due to Hawking radiation) before that material has a chance to move any further in, so in reality most of it can never reach the singularity, but perhaps the light can - as the black hole evaporates, the event horizon will migrate inwards as the energy density just outside the event horizon is reduced, so the light will get a chance to move a bit further in. At some stage when the event horizon disappears and the light is free to to go straight through what was the centre of the black hole, it will be shoot out the other side, liberated, never at any stage being infinitely blue-shifted.