Aphex_Twin
Evergreen
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2002
- Messages
- 7,474
Having read Hawking's "Brief history of time" I was left with some unanswered dilemmas:
1. Are black holes stable? If a black hole evaporates to a mass below it's Chandrasekhar limit will it turn into something like a neutron star?; or if someone uses a ridiculous ammount of energy input to compress an object to a black hole, once the compression is stopped, will the miniature black hole continue to exist? (that is, will it decay at a normal rate).
2. Do object truly ever fall into a black hole?
If an object is never actually "seen" to fall into a BH (although it is redshifted), can we say it never falls in? Say I am that object, an unfortunate astronaut ready to pass through the event horizon. As I am aproaching the event horizon, time, from my perspective is dilated, which means that the few meters before I will collapse into the BH will take me a fraction of a second (depending on the size of the BH), but a gzillion years in "outside time". But what if by the time I reach the BH the BH has evaporated?
3. If an object is capabile of crossing the EH in finite time, how much time will it take to reach singularity? If we say time is extremely dilated around the EH, if it is infinitely dilated at the EH beyond it... more than infinity? Can we say thus that a BH can never accumulate more than it's initial matter into it's singularity (or that all new mass will be concentrated solely around the EH)?
1. Are black holes stable? If a black hole evaporates to a mass below it's Chandrasekhar limit will it turn into something like a neutron star?; or if someone uses a ridiculous ammount of energy input to compress an object to a black hole, once the compression is stopped, will the miniature black hole continue to exist? (that is, will it decay at a normal rate).
2. Do object truly ever fall into a black hole?
If an object is never actually "seen" to fall into a BH (although it is redshifted), can we say it never falls in? Say I am that object, an unfortunate astronaut ready to pass through the event horizon. As I am aproaching the event horizon, time, from my perspective is dilated, which means that the few meters before I will collapse into the BH will take me a fraction of a second (depending on the size of the BH), but a gzillion years in "outside time". But what if by the time I reach the BH the BH has evaporated?
3. If an object is capabile of crossing the EH in finite time, how much time will it take to reach singularity? If we say time is extremely dilated around the EH, if it is infinitely dilated at the EH beyond it... more than infinity? Can we say thus that a BH can never accumulate more than it's initial matter into it's singularity (or that all new mass will be concentrated solely around the EH)?