- #1
Graviman
- 19
- 0
This is something that has bothered me for a while, so i thought to share it with other relativity enthusiasts.
A black hole may accumulate charge, which along with the rest of the matter will work its way to the centre of the black hole. This means that the blach hole will be surrounded by a radially symetrical E-field. Since all EM fields may be seen as a wave traveling out, even if they are effectively 0 Hz, then this means that an EM wave is leaving from the centre of a black hole. Does this mean that a photon can leave from the very centre of the black hole, as long as it is only traveling radially? The charge being form invariant means that to get this to work you could alternately pour in +ve then -ve charges, to make a detectable RF frequency emission.
Put another way if a photon is aimed at the exact centre of a black hole, so that it's velocity always remains a radial vector, does the photon pass straight through?
Mart
A black hole may accumulate charge, which along with the rest of the matter will work its way to the centre of the black hole. This means that the blach hole will be surrounded by a radially symetrical E-field. Since all EM fields may be seen as a wave traveling out, even if they are effectively 0 Hz, then this means that an EM wave is leaving from the centre of a black hole. Does this mean that a photon can leave from the very centre of the black hole, as long as it is only traveling radially? The charge being form invariant means that to get this to work you could alternately pour in +ve then -ve charges, to make a detectable RF frequency emission.
Put another way if a photon is aimed at the exact centre of a black hole, so that it's velocity always remains a radial vector, does the photon pass straight through?
Mart