- #1
TobyC
- 87
- 0
I have been reading about black holes and am intrigued by the fact that when you use schwarzschild coordinates to describe a particle free falling radially into a black hole, it takes an infinite amount of coordinate time for the particle to reach the event horizon. Since the coordinate time in schwarzschild coordinates is the proper time for a distant observer, it will also take an infinite amount of a distant observer's proper time before the particle crosses the horizon. This happens despite the fact that the particle crosses the event horizon and reaches the singularity in a finite amount of its own proper time.
This seems to raise lots of questions that I hope some of you might be able to answer, like how is it that we, as distant observers, can observe black holes to grow as they pull in matter? Shouldn't all this matter get stuck at the event horizon?
I found an interesting website which claimed that this phenomenon was really just an optical illusion, since particles only appear to get 'stuck' at the event horizon because the light they send out becomes infinitely red shifted. The site seemed to suggest that in reality objects fall into a black hole in a finite time. But there seems to be something more than just an optical illusion going on which I can't get my head around.
If you take a supermassive black hole so that the horizon can be reached and crossed without being torn up by tidal forces, and if a spaceship then launches itself toward the black hole it will appear, to distant observers, to get stuck at the event horizon. You could interpret this as being an optical illusion but if you then wait a hundred years or more and send in a second spaceship traveling faster, won't the second spaceship be able to actually meet up with the first and chat to the century old astronauts about what they've missed during their fall? This seems to be what should happen when you look at it with schwarzschild coordinates, but I'm unsure.
This seems to raise lots of questions that I hope some of you might be able to answer, like how is it that we, as distant observers, can observe black holes to grow as they pull in matter? Shouldn't all this matter get stuck at the event horizon?
I found an interesting website which claimed that this phenomenon was really just an optical illusion, since particles only appear to get 'stuck' at the event horizon because the light they send out becomes infinitely red shifted. The site seemed to suggest that in reality objects fall into a black hole in a finite time. But there seems to be something more than just an optical illusion going on which I can't get my head around.
If you take a supermassive black hole so that the horizon can be reached and crossed without being torn up by tidal forces, and if a spaceship then launches itself toward the black hole it will appear, to distant observers, to get stuck at the event horizon. You could interpret this as being an optical illusion but if you then wait a hundred years or more and send in a second spaceship traveling faster, won't the second spaceship be able to actually meet up with the first and chat to the century old astronauts about what they've missed during their fall? This seems to be what should happen when you look at it with schwarzschild coordinates, but I'm unsure.