0 Members and 69 Guests are viewing this topic.
It is.The hint is in the name.A super massive black hole is a black hole.
I think this comment of yours is slightly dumber than your idea that things fall up.
A SMBH has Ultra high gravity force
Due to those abilities, the SMBH can generate new particle pairs near its event horizon
The particles that are ejected into the accretion disc, orbit at almost the speed of light with temp of 10^9c.
Do you claim that any BH has similar abilities and accretion disc as SMBH?
As long as you can't see the difference between BH to SMBH, it proves that you are totally out of real science.
I have stated that new particle pairs are created near the SMBH' event horizon by its ultra high Electromagnets and gravity force.
Quote from: Dave Lev on 18/07/2021 18:51:05As long as you can't see the difference between BH to SMBH, it proves that you are totally out of real science.The difference is that a SMBH has more size; not that it is magic as you are suggesting.
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05Do you claim that any BH has similar abilities and accretion disc as SMBH?You just asked me to prove that a black hole is a black hole.Do you have any idea how stupid that question is?
Quote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05Do you claim that any BH has similar abilities and accretion disc as SMBH?
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05Due to those abilities, the SMBH can generate new particle pairs near its event horizonAny BH will do that; it's called Hawking radiation.In fact, the tiny little black holes do it better.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05Due to those abilities, the SMBH can generate new particle pairs near its event horizon
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05A SMBH has Ultra high gravity forceOnce you have enough gravity to trap light, having any more doesn't make a difference.You have invented this distinction, but it is not real.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05A SMBH has Ultra high gravity force
But we don't need to see.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 18:51:05Due to those abilities, the SMBH can generate new particle pairs near its event horizonAny BH will do that; it's called Hawking radiation.In fact, the tiny little black holes do it better.
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 05:32:34I have stated that new particle pairs are created near the SMBH' event horizon by its ultra high Electromagnets and gravity force.We've never seen that happen either.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Yesterday at 05:32:34I have stated that new particle pairs are created near the SMBH' event horizon by its ultra high Electromagnets and gravity force.
It is impossible mission to see the new particle pair creation near the SMBH' event horizon.
it is all about EM power.
No, a SMBH is totally different from a BH as a Lion is different from a Lion Cub.
No, they are totally different!!!
The basic idea of creating new particles around the BH is OK.
Therefore, in order to generate any sort of new particle, EM is requested.Without EM there is no new particle pair.This is real science!
Quote from: Dave Lev on 19/07/2021 06:54:47The basic idea of creating new particles around the BH is OK.Yes, as long as the BH evaporates at the same time, otherwise you break the mass conservation law and that's not possible.We know this.It has been proven mathematically.You keep ignoring this fact.This is presumably because you don't care about reality.
Did we ever observed a BH that had been evaporated due to Hawking radiation?
do we have any evidence for the existence of negative mass?
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Today at 10:22:51Do we have any evidence for the existence of negative mass?Again, of course we don't. No sensible person would expect that we would.But we do have its "cousin"." Currently, the closest known real representative of such exotic matter is a region of negative pressure density produced by the Casimir effect."Fromhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_mass
Quote from: Dave Lev on Today at 10:22:51Do we have any evidence for the existence of negative mass?
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Today at 10:22:51Did we ever observed a BH that had been evaporated due to Hawking radiation?No, of course not.It's like expecting to see a black cat in a dark cellar.Nobody would be so stupid as to expect to see that.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Today at 10:22:51Did we ever observed a BH that had been evaporated due to Hawking radiation?
If the theory of BH evaporation was real, we could see that the BH is losing mass over time.
Quote from: Dave Lev on 19/07/2021 15:00:52If the theory of BH evaporation was real, we could see that the BH is losing mass over time.Please explain how we could measure such a tiny loss of mass over the span of a single human life time.
I agree. It might be very difficult.
Quote from: Dave Lev on 19/07/2021 15:13:33I agree. It might be very difficult.You said that it could be done. Tell us how.
QuoteQuote from: Dave Lev on Today at 07:07:48It is impossible mission to see the new particle pair creation near the SMBH' event horizon....8. It does not happen, because it's a figment of Dave's imagination and breaks the conservation laws.
Quote from: Dave Lev on Today at 07:07:48It is impossible mission to see the new particle pair creation near the SMBH' event horizon....
Never the less, based on real science - there is no negative mass.
"We recall, and justify in detail, the not so familiar subdominant trace energy condition for ordinary (baryon-electron nonrelativistic) matter.