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George Jones
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Aryianna said:There is a physicist by the name of Amos Ori whose research is about this subject matter. I have met him many years ago at Caltech, and he did explain to me that it is possible to escape the event horizon. I had a copy of his paper, and he has worked with Kip Thorne on this subject matter. I'll look it up.
Do you mean "escape the event horizon" or "survive the curvature singularity singularity at inner (Cauchy) horizon"?
There is a weak curvature singularity at the Cauchy inner horizon (IH) of a rotating black hole. Shredding is caused by tidal force, and tidal force is caused by spacetime curvature, so isn't shedding guaranteed by a curvature singularity?
Seminal work on this was done by Poisson and Israel, and this work was continued by Ori. See
http://physics.technion.ac.il/~school/Amos_Ori.pdf .
Ori writes "Consequence to the curvature tensor at the IH ... However, the IH-singularity is weak (namely, tidally non-destructive.)"
Roughly, if components of g (the metric) are continuous but "pointy" (like the absolute value function), then first derivatives of g have step diiscontinuities (like the Heaviside step function), and second derivatives of g (used in the curvature tensor) are like Dirac delta functions. If a curvature singularity blows up like a Dirac delta function, then integration produces only a finite contribution to the tidal deformation of an object, which, if the object is robust enough, it can withstand.
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