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Should density be considered in the role of the strength of a gravitational field?

Ok, here me out. Black holes are usually formed from the compression of the mas released during the death of a supermassive star, however they have the same mass as the star (or even less). Yet when ...
Chukwufumnanya Molokwu's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
182 views

How are objects inside a black hole affected by the gravity of objects outside the black hole?

There are many Q&As about whether something inside a black hole can escape the event horizon if another massive object gets close enough to pull it out. I realize the answer (I think universally ...
Peter Moore's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
77 views

Definition of surface gravity via the non-affine geodesic equation

I have found a discrepancy in the way different sources define surface gravity (or derive) via the non-affine geodesic equation satisfied by the a Killing vector $\xi$ on a Killing Horizon (KH), up to ...
Herr Feinmann's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
90 views

Is quark-gluon plasma dense enough to have an event horizon with enough of it?

I've taken a few cracks and figuring this out myself, as a novice, with the equations $r_s=\frac{2GM}{c^2}$ and $M = \frac{4}{3}\rho \pi r^3$ but I think I'm just spinning in circles. Is quark-gluon ...
MikeHelland's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
56 views

Observing an event horizon while approaching one

A thought crossed my mind that I realized was hard to conceptualize so I decided to simplify the question by putting it in terms of event horizons. If I am an observer approaching black hole "A&...
Diniden's user avatar
  • 101
5 votes
1 answer
541 views

Do gyroscopes still work inside event horizon?

Imagine a gyroscope falls into the event horizon of a supermassive black hole, what would happen to the gyroscope? will it remains in the same position before it falls into the event horizon?
user6760's user avatar
  • 13.1k
1 vote
1 answer
106 views

Closest possible flyby to a nonrotating supermassive black hole

Imagine you think Laplace is the last word on black holes. That is, you are aware of the radius for which the escape velocity is $c$, but you think gravity is Newtonian. You set your spacecraft on a ...
Mark Foskey's user avatar
  • 3,680
0 votes
1 answer
110 views

How to derive the surface gravity in terms of redshift factor in static spacetime?

I am following Carroll's book "Spacetime and Geometry" p. 245-247. I have the following expression for the surface gravity of a Killing horizon: $$\kappa^2=-\frac{1}{2}(\nabla_{\mu}K_{\nu})(\...
Damiano Scevola's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
180 views

Can a body escape a black hole by being thrusted? [duplicate]

I am told many time that nothing can escape black-hole because black-holes escape velocity is more than speed of light. But we know object don't necessarily have to exceed speed of light to escape a ...
Zeesan's user avatar
  • 41
7 votes
3 answers
648 views

Why does rotation make black holes smaller?

A non-rotating black hole has a Schwarzchild radius of $2GM/c^2$. A rotating black hole of the same mass has a smaller outer horizon radius, down to a limit of $GM/c^2$ at the fastest possible ...
isaacg's user avatar
  • 185
0 votes
0 answers
27 views

Black Holes and Gravity [duplicate]

We know that nothing including light can escape the gravitational pull of black hole. Now special relativity says that nothing travels faster than speed of light. Then how can effects of gravity due ...
Sarban Bhattacharya's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
57 views

Surface gravity inside a star

In general relativity, there is a definition of the surface gravity that is associated with the Killing vectors, is there a similar definition for the interior of stars/compact objects? I would expect ...
TTT's user avatar
  • 63
0 votes
1 answer
495 views

How small do you need to compress mass to make a black hole?

I am wondering if there is an equation for how close you need to compress a mass to make a black hole. I have seen claims that if the earth is shrunk to the size of a golf ball, it would create a ...
Prime Price's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
662 views

Gravity of black holes

I was looking At a couple different replies to some questions on here and I kept seeing people saying that larger mass black holes have a lower gravitaional strength on their surface than lower mass ...
pip horton's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
23 views

Is it possible for a black hole singularity to interact gravitationally with other celestial bodies (if we analyze it using the concept of gravitons)? [duplicate]

It is known to all that the travelling speed of gravitons (the propagation speed of gravitational field) is not instant. So for black holes, the gravitons (the gravitational field) generated by the ...
Xinghong Wang's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
61 views

If the reduction in Grav. PE in falling into a large Neutron Star approaches $mc^2$, shouldn't we conclude that a black hole is a large Neutron Star?

If we integrate the potential energy due to surface gravity from the surface to infinite radial distance (deep space), with a bit of basic calculus we should get $\Delta E = mgr [J]$. This depends ...
Alan Gee's user avatar
  • 247
24 votes
7 answers
8k views

Why light can't escape a black hole but can escape a star with same mass? [duplicate]

I'm new to astronomy and was wondering why light can't escape from a black hole but can escape from a star with the same mass. In theory, the gravity of a star 100x the mass of the sun, and the ...
Vitor 0101f's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
79 views

Collapsing shell of null matter

In Naked Singularity (1973), Penrose claimed that the inequality $$A\leq 16\pi G m_0$$ is equivalent to $$4\pi\int r^2 \Omega \leq [\int r(1-\nabla^2\ln r)\Omega]^2$$ in the spherical symmetric case (...
Bowen Zhao's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
91 views

Is there any evidence black holes can grow (gain mass) by accretion?

When LIGO detected GW150914, we saw for the first time the merger of 2 black holes and the gravitational wave evidence fit with our models and understanding for such an event. (Horizon meeting horizon)...
Bunnykillbot's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
50 views

Counterintuitive effect between event horizons of a 'binary black hole system'

I recently posted a question on my 'mobile phone profile' where I cannot post images and videos so I am trying to use this profile to solve my incomprehension of a gravitational-tidal effect that ...
jbradvi9's user avatar
  • 467
1 vote
1 answer
49 views

If two black holes orbit around each other should their tidal forces cause a shrinking of the closer parts of their event horizons?

I recently asked a question about the influence of external gravitational fields on the stability of the geometry of a part or all the event horizon of a black hole. I understood the answer in a ...
Krešimir Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
43 views

Influence of external gravitational fields on the volume of a part of the black hole event horizon

FIRST QUESTION: In the event that a smaller black hole orbiting a larger black hole in an elongated elliptical orbit reaches the so-called perihelion of its trajectory, can it temporarily change the ...
Krešimir Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
143 views

Gravity near event horizon: very strong/ infinite or approaching zero?

From the point of view of a far-away observer of a black hole, is the gravity on an infalling object near the event horizon very strong or very weak? There are two competing effects: On the one hand, ...
Moonraker's user avatar
  • 3,151
17 votes
2 answers
6k views

Space falling faster than light after it falls inside the event horizon of a black hole?

Typing my question directly so people know what I am asking, afterwards providing background and context. Q: What does it mean when space is falling, faster than light? (I am specifically wondering ...
William Martens's user avatar
27 votes
5 answers
9k views

What exactly makes a black hole STAY a black hole?

I don't understand how, as a black hole gets smaller and smaller from the excretion of Hawking radiation, it retains its ability to capture photons. I imagine there would be a point in its life cycle ...
levi shell's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
351 views

Are rotating black holes producing a frame dragging effect inside the event horizon?

Are rotating black holes producing a frame dragging effect inside the event horizon? Is that effect moving space inside the event horizon at speeds far greater than the speed of light?
Krešimir Bradvica's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
140 views

What happens when a neutron star becomes a black hole?

Suppose you have a neutron star that's as close as can be imagined to the required mass to become a black hole, perhaps just one proton mass away from this limit, when it collides with a dust grain ...
Ofer Sadan's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
96 views

How compact can a thin shell be without collapsing?

I've heard of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchdahl%27s_theorem. It states that as the ratio between a spheres radius a it's Schwarzschild radius approaches $9/8$. the pressure at the center tends to ...
blademan9999's user avatar
  • 3,001
-1 votes
1 answer
312 views

How deep is a gravity well of a supermassive black hole? [closed]

Just for the sake of curiosity I am trying to understand how far we should stay away from the black hole to avoid influence of its gravity on us. In the first iteration I know about the 2nd and the ...
Joe Dow's user avatar
  • 101
1 vote
2 answers
203 views

How big is the force just above the horizon of a black hole?

There are huge tidal forces at work around a black hole. But the larger the hole, the smaller the tidal effects near the horizon. So the differences between nearby local forces is small. What about ...
MatterGauge's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
806 views

Can two relativistic black holes' event horizons overlap and separate again?

I have read this question: What I have not seen is a purely classical argument for the non-separation of a black hole merger. One can obviously take the time reversed spacetime manifold of a merger ...
Árpád Szendrei's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
112 views

Gravitational collapse seen by a distant observer

Consider the gravitational collapse of a spherically symmetric dust cloud, as seen by a distant observer. The Oppenheimer-Snyder solution tells us that, at some point during the collapse, the event ...
Frank's user avatar
  • 91
3 votes
1 answer
104 views

Is there a possibility of frame dragging inside the event horizon?

Is there a possibility of frame dragging inside the event horizon? If frame dragging is related with gravity and space and as the black hole fills a space and produces a gravitational effect that ...
Janko Bradvica's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
118 views

If a black hole's mass is derived from its gravitational field, then why would mass be restricted inside the EH, while the field extends outside? [duplicate]

I have read this question: Let's consider the simplest kind of black hole, which is one with no rotation or electric charge. The quick answer to the question is "yes, the mass is entirely within ...
Árpád Szendrei's user avatar
12 votes
3 answers
4k views

Shouldn't black holes exert the same gravitational force as an object of similar mass but lower density?

If the earth got shrunk into the size of a peanut, it would turn into a black hole, which would have a higher density but same mass. Since the center of mass of both bodies would be the same, the ...
Cordi4l's user avatar
  • 169
1 vote
0 answers
34 views

Event horizon around branes

I'm wondering if a brane is a massive topological defect, does it have an event horizon? Is it related to the effect capuring matter fields on the brane? Thanks for the answers
RobertSzili's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
136 views

A closed laboratory free falls and approaches the event horizon of a Black Hole. Are measurements of physical constants affected?

A closed laboratory is in perfect free fall and hence is an inertial frame. This lab is falling toward the event horizon of a Black Hole. The lab is sufficiently small and the event horizon is ...
Clay Holdsworth's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
48 views

Does a Magnetar have a magnetic event horizon different than it's schwarzchild radius?

Being the strongest magnets in the universe I think there would be a point of know return different for a neodymium magnets then that of similar non magnetic mass.
Joe's user avatar
  • 1,356
1 vote
2 answers
163 views

Will this method work to take a photo inside a black hole?

Taking a Photo Inside a black Hole The following is a “thought Experiment” which could describe an actual methodology to photograph (and be able to see the photograph) of the area inside a Black Hole’...
GeorgeL's user avatar
  • 11
3 votes
4 answers
925 views

Do black holes attract more in GR than Newtonian gravity beyond their event horizon? [duplicate]

I was once shown that if a black hole with the mass of our Sun replaced our Sun in the solar system (I believe it was in a simulation program), the attraction it has on the planets will be the same ...
yolo's user avatar
  • 2,700
3 votes
6 answers
277 views

What would you see dropping a sufficiently strong chain with substantial length into a black hole?

Here's a visual representation of the scenario Here you can see we have a black hole on the left. The event horizon is the edge of the black hole. You are far away from the event horizon, and a chain ...
Michael King's user avatar
1 vote
4 answers
12k views

What is the gravity at the event horizon of a black hole?

I've been reading and couldn't find any answer to this question. What is the minimum required gravity to prevent light from escaping?
Praearcturus's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
57 views

What is Observed by a Planet in a Region of Spacetime in a Theoretical Universe that has a Mass Density Gradient?

Planet M exists in a theoretical Universe that is like our Universe in every way except it can contain Large regions of Spacetime that have mass density gradients. For a specific time, t, Planet M is ...
Clay Holdsworth's user avatar
5 votes
4 answers
401 views

Can gravity from a massive object outside our cosmological event horizon have any effect on Earth?

The gravity of a very massive luminous celestial object traveling at the speed of light away from us (at the Hubble Sphere) would have an Extremely small, but non-zero gravitation effect on Earth (...
Clay Holdsworth's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
55 views

Can singularities be ever formed from an outsiders perspective? [duplicate]

As far as I know, as an object gets closer to an event horizon, gravitation time dilation makes it move slower from an outside perspective, so that it looks like it take an infinite amount of time for ...
Mateusz Krzaczek's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
137 views

Particular behaviour of 'black hole' horizon in modified gravity

When working in a particular theory of modified gravity, one can see that a solution for a spherically symmetric and static puntual mass is given by \begin{equation} ds^2=-B(r)dt^2+A(r)dr^2+r^2d\theta^...
ALPs's user avatar
  • 77
2 votes
0 answers
35 views

How can black holes emit detectable magnetic fields and gravity if nothing can escape the event horizon? [duplicate]

How can black holes emit detectable magnetic fields and gravity if nothing can escape the event horizon?
d-b's user avatar
  • 439
1 vote
1 answer
358 views

Gravitational potential relative a black hole

If I understand correctly, the escape velocity is $c$ at the event horizon of a black hole. This would seem to mean that an object falling into the black hole from an infinite distance would attain ...
Kristoffer Sjöö's user avatar
6 votes
2 answers
3k views

If I jump into a black hole, will I see myself passing event horizon? [closed]

Given a black hole with mass of the Milky Way (1.6x10^42 kg), I built a frame that 1 m above the event horizon. I am jumping from this frame my legs down (since I am afraid to dive into a dangerous ...
greatvovan's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
249 views

Computation of surface gravity with Kruskal coordinates

The surface gravity of a Schwarzschild black hole (BH) is $$ \kappa = \frac{1}{2}f'(r)\Big|_{r=2m} $$ where $f(r)=1-2m/r$ is the component $g^{rr}$ of the contravariant metric in Schwarzschild ...
apt45's user avatar
  • 2,237