Physics, asked by sirinriaz6704, 1 year ago

To an observer in a black hole, would light be stationary? Would it be as if the black hole is accelerating faster than the speed of light?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0
For particles traveling at constant velocity there is no event horizon, and so they act nothing like a black hole. Light from other regions of space will eventually reach it, unlike a black hole. Further, the forces between atoms in what ever matter constitutes the mass are co-moving and so there is no increased gravitational interaction between them. While the distances between them appear to change to an outside observer (as the mass is accelerated) once it reaches constant velocity they are fixed.

What has not been mentioned in other answers is the effect of acceleration. When a particle is continuously accelerated there isan apparent event horizon. See the relevant Wikipedia page here. So this has some features that we associate with a black hole, however there are still major differences. An object undergoing constant acceleration does indeed behave like it is static in a constant gravitational field. However, in the case of such an object the direction of the equivalent field is constant (and in a constant direction) throughout the object. This is not true for the gravitational field of a black hole, which is spherically symmetric.

Of course once the particle stops accelerating the apparent horizon disappears.

Hope its help u
Answered by Anonymous
0
The motion of a test object relative to the black hole does affect how the hole's gravity curves its trajectory, but there's no useful way to view.
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