Skip to main content

All Questions

Tagged with
1 vote
0 answers
33 views

Does gravity accelerate you towards the geodesic of light between you and the mass?

If there's a planet far away, you will accelerate straight towards it due to gravity. If you place a Schwarzschild black hole right in the middle between you and the planet (the distance between the ...
Zach's user avatar
  • 161
2 votes
0 answers
53 views

Can part of space be causally disconnected from the rest of the universe by being surrounded by black holes? [duplicate]

Is it possible for black hole event horizons to overlap and form a spherical wall around an island of space (that's not inside a black hole) while still being causally disconnected from the rest of ...
user3624007's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
157 views

When you are in a gravitational field, do object far away get physically closer to you as you get closer to the mass?

An observer A is close to a black hole and an observer B one light year away. They are both remaining at constant radial distance from the black hole. A is at 2 Rs away from the center of the black ...
Zach's user avatar
  • 161
3 votes
1 answer
72 views

How to Understand Negative Energy in the Ergoregion?

I am trying to understand the Penrose process and having trouble explaining negative energy in the ergoregion. How I interpret it is: Energy is the dot product between the four momentum of the object ...
Gene's user avatar
  • 63
26 votes
10 answers
13k views

How do black holes move if they are just regions in spacetime?

If black holes are just regions of spacetime, how can black holes even move? When matter moves through spacetime, it bends the spacetime around it, but if black holes are just regions of spacetime, ...
Rick Gennings's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
115 views

Time required to reach Black Hole's Event Horizon from outsider perspective?

Let's imagine a pair of particles that is entangled. One (call it $P_1$) is released and then falls to a black hole from a distant $x_0$, (for example $x_0=5r_s$) and velocity $v_0(=1/2c)$, while the ...
Nhat Nguyen's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
66 views

Types of singularities

I am confused about the types of singularities. According to my limited knowledge there are two types of singularity. One is space like singularity ( a curvature singularity enclosed within a null ...
zahra's user avatar
  • 21
1 vote
2 answers
132 views

Keplerian Frequency of Schwarzschild Black hole

The Keplerian frequency/ Orbital frequency is the inverse of orbital period and for Schwarzschild black hole it is given by $$\frac{1}{2\pi}\sqrt{\frac{M}{r^3}}.$$ its unit is Hertz. Now To express ...
zahra's user avatar
  • 21
0 votes
1 answer
67 views

What’s the condition to form an astrophysical wormhole?

According to GR, what’s the mechanism for a star to form a wormhole? How is it different from collapsing to a black hole? What’s the energy scale required?
user74750's user avatar
  • 195
1 vote
1 answer
108 views

Carter-Robinson Theorem

There are uniqueness theorems that classify Black holes according to its mass, angular momentum and charge. One of the theorem is Carter-Robinson theorem which has many assumptions and then it says ...
Talha Ahmed's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
87 views

Intuition for the interior Killing vector fields in Schwarzschild?

The Schwarzschild metric represents a stationary (and static), spherically-symmetric, spacetime. These characteristics are manifested by the four Killing vector fields: one for time translation and ...
Ben H's user avatar
  • 1,290
0 votes
0 answers
66 views

How can Planck-length elements exists in spacetime? [duplicate]

My question is simple, how can the theory of finite-sized elements (Planck-sized elements) in spacetime be correct, when you find the number $\pi$ in the Schwartzchild representation of the black hole,...
Superunknown's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
101 views

Flat space between colliding black holes

When 2 black holes approach each other, they both bend space in an opposite direction. There must always be a flat space between 2 colliding black holes. However, I heard that they actually merge, ...
Zoltan K.'s user avatar
  • 187
0 votes
1 answer
124 views

Event horizon in stationary spacetime

In the case of non-stationary spacetimes finding the event horizon is no easy task. The stationary case should somehow be less involved or so it is in some well known cases, such as the Kerr spacetime....
Mr. Feynman's user avatar
  • 1,989
1 vote
1 answer
62 views

What effect causes stars to be optically enlarged at the Einstein ring of a black hole?

Sadly i do not know what this effect is called, but it can be seen in some simulations; Credit to Alessandro Roussel The same effect can be seen on the Wiki page for black holes. For a while now, me ...
ErikHall's user avatar
  • 308

15 30 50 per page
1
2 3 4 5
22