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Message
From
10/03/2004 11:14:08
Hilmar Zonneveld
Independent Consultant
Cochabamba, Bolivia
 
 
To
10/03/2004 02:04:21
Neil Mc Donald
Cencom Systems P/L
The Sun, Australia
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Conferences & events
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00882336
Message ID:
00884854
Views:
16
>What I was trying to say is this, if no light can escape from a black hole, the gravitational attraction or velocity of gravity (Vg) must be greater than the speed of light. Please note that the only observable emmissions from the vicinity of Black Holes is Hawkins radiation which is caused by the atoms being ripped apart, just prior to the event horizon. As the electrons are in a state greater than 7 electron volts they have sufficient energy to escape.

I never heard of a "speed of gravitation"; and it is confusing, at the least, to try to compare gravitational force (N/kg or m/sec^2) with a speed, like the light speed (m/sec).

The traditional explanation, for laymen, is that the escape velocity becomes greater than the speed of light; a ray of light will "fall back" into the black hole. According to a recent article in "Das Himmelsjahr", this explanation is innacurate, because light can never go slower (in a vacuum) than 300,000 km/sec; IOW, it won't gradually slow down, like a stone that you throw into the air, to later fall back. The real explanation is more confusing; somehow, within the event horizon, all space-time paths lead to the center of the black hole.

This is under the classical assumption that the black hole is not rotating; the math for a rotating black hole is more complicated, and has only been solved in recent years.


I don't know too many mathematical details about the Hawkings radiation, so I can't comment on this.

>The zone where this occurs is approx 100Kms from the event horizon and has also been observed.
>
>Anything that crosses the event horizon never returns, including photons.
Difference in opinions hath cost many millions of lives: for instance, whether flesh be bread, or bread be flesh; whether whistling be a vice or a virtue; whether it be better to kiss a post, or throw it into the fire... (from Gulliver's Travels)
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