does matter ever stop accelerating after crossing the event horizon? if a singularity has no surface, would it loop back and forth to each edge of the event horizon, stop at the center, or just never end acceleration?
Does matter ever stop accelerating after crossing the event horizon? if a singularity has no surface...
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so this is the power of Veeky Forums not knowing anything.
this is a product of popular science. it's not his fault.
don't worry op neither of those guys knows the answer either
technically nobody knows the answer but the point is that everyone on sci only comes here to feel above everyone else
projecting much?
event horizon---theory
singularity----theory
so you are asking whether there are specific theories on specific theories. pretty futile dont you think? baka
No it don't. Why do you think it does?
Imagine black hole as a sphere. SIngularity is one small point in the middle of black hole. Hen something cross event horizon that object photons are no longer allowed to escape the black hole because it's enormous gravity that's why it looks like it stopped. (Sorry if it's
incomprehensible or if I have any grammatical mistakes in text. English is not my native language).
At this point all of it is just speculation,
I think if a supernova collapsed and all that matter tried to exist in the center, there'd be another big bang.
So I'm thinking it would continue to accelerate for infinity, always a point closer but never getting there.
Thinking of all that supercompressed, superdense matter: and somehow the atoms still keep moving when they're so pressed up against each other.
All theoretical, of course.