- #36
rjbeery
- 346
- 8
Pick any coordinate system you wish. Kruskal coordinates are not defined at the infinite observer mentioned in my OP. Are you aware of a coordinate system in which the infinite observer would calculate that a mass infalling toward an EH would do so in finite time? What else could I possibly mean when I say "crosses the EH in infinite time"?JesseM said:What does "mass crosses the EH in infinite time" mean, though? Are you talking about coordinate time in some coordinate system, and if so which one? If the black hole evaporates in finite time, I don't think you can use Schwarzschild coordinates which are specific to the Schwarzschild spacetime which describes an eternal black hole. And even in this spacetime you can find coordinate systems (like Kruskal-Szkeres) where mass crosses the EH in a finite coordinate time.
Also, to say that Schwarzschild coordinates only apply to eternal black holes simply sounds like an ad hoc defense. Where did you come across this? Or is this personal supposition?
Light is Einstein's absolute system of measurement. There is no "trick" or "illusion" when light suggests that the mass does not cross the hypothetical event horizon. The proof of this is revealed by having the infalling mass accelerate itself back to the outside observer and compare clocks after any arbitrary (finite) amount of time has passed.JesseM said:Perhaps you're not talking about coordinate time at all, but rather what is seen visually by some observer outside the horizon (i.e. the proper time according to their own clock when they receive various light signals from events on the worldline of an object falling in). In the case of an eternal Schwarzschild black hole, it is true that if a falling clock is ticking as it falls in, the proper time for an external observer between seeing the light from successive ticks will get larger and larger, and the outside observer will never get to see the clock reading the exact time it read at the moment it crossed the horizon.