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Old 30-June-2008, 06:05 PM
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sabianq sabianq is offline
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this is why i think matter is indeed changed to energy as it crosses the event horizon of a black hole

It should be noted, that in order for an object to actually
reach the speed of light, it must have no mass, since E=mass*speed of
light^2

from here
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_horizon

Quote:
In general relativity, an event horizon is a boundary in spacetime, an area surrounding a black hole, beyond which events cannot affect an outside observer. Light emitted from inside the horizon can never reach the observer, and anything that passes through the horizon from the observer's side is never seen again.
is this a region where the gravitational attraction is equal to the speed of light?

meaning that as something falls into an event horizon of a black hole, it must be accelerated to the speed of light otherwise it would not be a black hole.

as stated above, if an object is approaching a relativistic velocity (meaning reaching the speed of light), then by if you follow special relativity dogma, that object must be turned into energy as it approaches and becomes equal to the speed of light.



Please, anybody tell me where I am lost in this reasoning.
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