Speed of a particle inside an event horizon

In summary: Consider a particle that has fallen inside the event horizon of a black hole. You can show that it must have a minimum radial velocity that scales as \frac{1}{\sqrt{r}} for small r. Where, by radial velocity I mean \frac{dr}{d \tau} and tau is the proper time. Doesn't this mean that as the particle approaches the singularity its speed surpasses c?Only because you're using a weird, non-local system of coordinates. To any local observer, particles will have velocities less than c.
  • #1
La Guinee
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Consider a particle that has fallen inside the event horizon of a black hole. You can show that
it must have a minimum radial velocity that scales as [tex] \frac{1}{\sqrt{r}} [/tex] for small r. Where, by radial velocity I mean [tex] \frac{dr}{d \tau} [/tex] and tau is the proper time. Doesn't this mean that as the particle approaches the singularity its speed surpasses c?
 
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  • #2
Only because you're using a weird, non-local system of coordinates. To any local observer, particles will have velocities less than c.

In other words, you're using proper time, but co-ordinate radius. Inside the black hole, one meter of coordinate radius has basically no relationship with an actual meter as measured by a meter stick by a local observer.
 
  • #3
I see, thanks.
 
  • #4
The variable r represents distorted distance outside the event horizon, but inside the event horizon it represents distorted time. Similarly, the variable t represents distorted time outside the event horizon, but inside the event horizon it represents distorted distance.

I find it hard to mentally picture what that really means, but the maths is clear on this point.
 
  • #5
Is there a way to reasonably define "proper velocity" inside the event horizon? What would be the relation between this coordinate system and the standard Schwarzschild coordinates?
 
  • #6
This is an old thread but I recently found an equation specifically referred to as the 'radial proper velocity of a zero angular momentum observer dropped from infinity' in relation to rotating black holes-

[tex]
v=-\frac{\sqrt{2Mr(r^2+a^2)}}{r^2+a^2cos^2\theta}\ c[/tex]

where

a=J/mc

M=Gm/c^2

and θ is the angle between the zenith and the radial line.

The entire equation reduces to [itex]v=c\sqrt{r_s/r}[/itex] for a static black [itex](r_s=2M)[/itex]. Interestingly, while proper velocity equals c at the event horizon for a static black hole (relative to infinity), for a rotating black hole, radial proper velocity seems to exceed c not just outside the outer event horizon but outside the ergosphere also.

source-
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0805/0805.0206v1.pdf [Broken] page 2
 
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  • #7
The variable r represents distorted distance outside the event horizon, but inside the event horizon it represents distorted time. Similarly, the variable t represents distorted time outside the event horizon, but inside the event horizon it represents distorted distance

I find it hard to mentally picture what that really means, but the maths is clear on this point.

Boy am I glad to see someone else say that! I've read that interpretation several places and it still boggles my mind!

But it convinces me even more that space and time have underlying origins and fundamental relationships we do not understand.
 
  • #8
A couple of equations regarding velocity from 'Exploring Black Holes' by Taylor & Wheeler (chapter 3: Plunging, project B: Inside the Black Hole) based on static black holes-

Rain frame (object dropped from rest at infinity) time between given radii-

[tex]\tau_{2\ rain} - \tau_{1\ rain}\ =\ \frac{1}{3}\sqrt{\frac{2}{M}}\left(r_1^{3/2} - r_2^{3/2}\right)[/tex]

where

[itex]M=Gm/c^2[/itex]

Divide the answer by c to get time, multiply by c (over 1m increments) to get velocity. Unity (i.e. 1) at EH. When you put in the Schwarzschild radius for [itex]\tau_{2\ rain}[/itex] and zero for [itex]\tau_{1\ rain}[/itex], you basically get the horizon to crunch distance for an object falling radially from rest at infinity-

[tex]\tau_{rain}(2M \rightarrow 0)=\frac{4}{3}M[/tex]

divide by c to get the horizon to crunch time for an object falling radially from rest at infinity.velocity of a free-falling object as clocked by the shell observer (r>2M)-

[tex]v_{shell}=\frac{dr_{shell}}{dt_{shell}}=-\sqrt{\frac{2M}{r}}[/tex]

(minus square root because the expression describes a decreasing radius as the object falls toward the black hole outside the horizon)proper velocity (can apply to r<2M)-

[tex]\frac{dr}{d\tau_{rain}}=-\sqrt{\frac{2M}{r}}[/tex]velocity as viewed from infinity (v=0 at event horizon)-

[tex]\frac{dr}{dt}=-\left(1-\frac{2M}{r}\right)\sqrt{\frac{2M}{r}}[/tex]Horizon to crunch distance for an object falling radially from rest at the event horizon (drip frame)-

[tex]\tau_{max}(2M \rightarrow 0)=\pi M[/tex]

divide by c to get the horizon to crunch time for an object falling radially from rest at the event horizon.

It appears the whole concept of distance inside a black hole is relative to how fast you cross the event horizon.Draft copy of second edition of EBH-
http://www.eftaylor.com/comments/
 
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1. What is the speed of a particle inside an event horizon?

The speed of a particle inside an event horizon is always moving at or beyond the speed of light. This is because the gravitational pull inside an event horizon is so strong that even light cannot escape, let alone slower moving particles.

2. Can a particle ever exceed the speed of light inside an event horizon?

No, according to the theory of general relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. This remains true even inside an event horizon.

3. How does the speed of a particle inside an event horizon affect time?

Inside an event horizon, time is severely distorted due to the intense gravitational pull. As a result, time slows down significantly for any particles or objects inside the event horizon.

4. Is it possible for a particle to escape an event horizon?

No, once a particle crosses the event horizon, it is impossible for it to escape. This is because the escape velocity required to overcome the gravitational pull is greater than the speed of light.

5. Can the speed of a particle inside an event horizon be measured?

No, since the speed of a particle inside an event horizon is beyond the speed of light, it cannot be measured using traditional methods. Additionally, time dilation inside the event horizon makes it difficult to accurately measure the speed of particles.

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