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I´m sure that I am not the first to ask this question, but I did not find the answer in recent threads-
There are three statements about black holes that I can´t bring together:
1. I will experience nothing special when I cross the event horizon of a massive black hole, and I will cross it in finite proper time.
2. For an observer in flat space far away from the black hole I will never reach the event horizon - the procedure takes infinite time.
3. An observer in flat space far away from the black hole will see it explode in finite time due to hawking radiation.
So will I suddenly get killed crossing the event horizon? Or will I reach he singularity?
Could someone please point out what I got wrong?
There are three statements about black holes that I can´t bring together:
1. I will experience nothing special when I cross the event horizon of a massive black hole, and I will cross it in finite proper time.
2. For an observer in flat space far away from the black hole I will never reach the event horizon - the procedure takes infinite time.
3. An observer in flat space far away from the black hole will see it explode in finite time due to hawking radiation.
So will I suddenly get killed crossing the event horizon? Or will I reach he singularity?
Could someone please point out what I got wrong?