|
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
There is a lot of great astrophysics now available for casual readers and viewers like me, and it is fun to speculate and cross reference ideas. The episode of the Universe (History Channel) on black holes describes that at some point matter that gets too close is stretched, rotated, and heated into a plasma around the black hole. This process is speculated to also occur inside the event horizon around the singularity.
Could tidal forces and the warped space around the singularity form a system where radiation dissapates outward, not escaping from inside the event horizon, but escaping away from the singularity as matter is stretched inward? As matter approaches the singularity it loses all its motional energy and the singularity itself becomes a Bose–Einstein condensate. From watching the Nova (PBS) episode on Bose–Einstein condensate, matter in such a state loses its particle nature and behaves as overlapping waves. Perhaps the singularity is not a point of collapsed particles, but a point of overlapping waves of matter. As waves, would the singularity better achieve super compression? If particles can be compressed experimental in a Bose-Einstein condensate using laboratory methods, and if the results of such a compression where high enough, then maybe it could give insight into the formation of the singularity and quantum gravity. |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Thanks, John M. |
|
|||
|
No references. I thought about how a magnetic bowl was used to cool the atoms to form a Bose–Einstein condensate in a laboratory. As atoms fall toward the singularity they are pulled apart by tidal forces, so the energy that holds the particles of the atom together is released. The released radiation is then trapped by the treadmill effect or caught in orbits around the singualrity while the matter spirals further downward. If the process is thorough enough (or even possible), then the particles could lose all motional energy before reaching the singularity.
|
|
||||
|
Oh, and welcome to the board, Icenova.
"If history has taught us one thing it is that, with hindsight, newly discovered laws always turn out to be quite logical extensions of what we have already known for a long time." -- Gerard 't Hooft
__________________
Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. |
|
|||
|
Quote:
|
|
|||
|
Light speed orbit likely is not at twice the event horizon radius for any size black hole, but there will be a circular orbit at 0.999c at some multiple of the event horizon radius; perhaps 1/5 the radius for a typical super massive blackhole.
What goes on inside the event horizon of any size blackhole is as speculative as most of the topics in ATM = against the mainstream. That will likely remain true even if a black hole passes within 10,000 kilometers of Earth. For super massive black holes, it seems to me, the event horizon is a sizable volume from which multistage rockets could escape, if their fuel has sufficient energy density and they have sufficient reaction mass. If we assume the singularity has a radius in the Planck length to pico meter range, then the average density of the singularity is one google = 10E100 times the density of water. Stuff spiraling into that surface is traveling almost c and suffering colissions, so it is very hot = trillion degrees c in my opinion. The temperature at the exact center seems irrelevent. We could argue that there are no molecules intact, so there is no molecular vibration and thus it is cold, but that seems bad logic to me. Neil Last edited by neilzero; 28-March-2008 at 10:57 AM. |
|
|||
|
All right...(no offense, Grey)...we have black holes, and white holes postulated, is there anything about grey holes somewhere?...a combination of the two? pete
never mind, should have just Googled it,....see:http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1989Ap&SS.159..301T
__________________
A third rate theory forbids A second rate theory explains after the fact A first rate theory predicts...A. Lomonosov |
|
|||
|
Quote:
If a photon is orbiting a massive, object, it will move at c. I am considering these orbits only, not the orbit of a particle with mass. Why do you believe light speed orbit to not likely be anything specific? This guesswork is just that, guesswork. |
|
|||
|
Hi alainprice: In a vacuum photons travel at c, weather orbiting or not. Typically near the event horizon the vacuum is imperfect so the photons travel a bit less than c, perhaps much less than c if the gravity is one trillion g. Neil
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Rogue Black Holes | 01101001 | Astronomy | 11 | 25-February-2008 11:36 AM |
| How can a black hole have a rotation? | Steve O | Questions and Answers | 13 | 20-February-2008 10:04 PM |
| The Birth Of A Galaxy | RussT | Against the Mainstream | 76 | 28-November-2006 02:58 PM |
| Missing black holes found | ToSeek | Astronomy | 8 | 03-June-2004 01:27 PM |
| Center of the Universe | Hadrian | Astronomical Observing, Equipment and Accessories | 44 | 29-September-2003 12:18 PM |