What happens to matter that falls into a black hole?

In summary: Summary: In summary, when an object falls into a black hole, time slows down for observers far away, and it seems like the object has stopped. However, the object actually continues falling according to the equations of a falling body.
  • #1
JohnnyTheFox
15
0
Hey, my first post here, glad I've found somewhere on the internet to discus this crazy stuff!

Anyway here's my question:

Matter falling into a black hole accelerates towards it under its gravity, towards the "event horizon" (or Rs=2GM/c^2)

The relativistic version of the law of gravity is F=GM/r^2*[1/(1-Rs/r)] so at the event horizon the force becomes infinite so then the speed of matter falling in can become the speed of light given infinite enegry, so it also has infinite mass?
But from outside nothing ever crosses this border as we see it getting slower and slower so it never acctuly touches it. But according to the matter it passes this and then on inside the black hole.

My question is assuming all of this, does that mean at some point there is an infinite amount of matter in the universe that we cannot see? It's all conveniently hidden behind the event horizon. So does this not violate the laws of conservation in a way, there suddenly being infinitley more enegry in the universe?
 
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  • #2
JohnnyTheFox said:
Hey, my first post here, glad I've found somewhere on the internet to discus this crazy stuff!

Anyway here's my question:

Matter falling into a black hole accelerates towards it under its gravity, towards the "event horizon" (or Rs=2GM/c^2)

The relativistic version of the law of gravity is F=GM/r^2*[1/(1-Rs/r)] so at the event horizon the force becomes infinite so then the speed of matter falling in can become the speed of light given infinite enegry, so it also has infinite mass?
But from outside nothing ever crosses this border as we see it getting slower and slower so it never acctuly touches it. But according to the matter it passes this and then on inside the black hole.

My question is assuming all of this, does that mean at some point there is an infinite amount of matter in the universe that we cannot see? It's all conveniently hidden behind the event horizon. So does this not violate the laws of conservation in a way, there suddenly being infinitley more enegry in the universe?
The "force" at the event horizon isn't infinite, it is just exactly enough to happen to equal the (gravitional pull) of the escape velocity of the speed of light. No matter and/or photons drawn into a BH have infinite energy (= infinite mass) so no, there is no BH with an infinite mass.

In fact, quite a few BH candidates have been measured with various, finite, masses up to the largest one (I know of) in the center of the elliptical galaxy M87 at ~3 billion Ms.
 
  • #3
Your question one. Ther ehas been a lot of confusion over the years about what happens when something falls into a black hole. The best answer is this: The object falls in according to the equations for a falling body. The problem is with what a faraway observer sees. The gravitation of a black hole is so great that time slows down in its vicinity.

If you imagine a flashing light on the falling object that flashes once every second, seconds pass slower and slower as the object approaches the hole. So they become farther and farther apart from the distant point of view. As the event horizon is approached, the flashes become so far apart that it seems like the object has stopped.

I probably don't explain this very well. Search the net on black holes and you should find an explanation somewhere.
 

1. What is a black hole event horizon?

The event horizon of a black hole is the boundary beyond which nothing, not even light, can escape the intense gravitational pull of the black hole.

2. How is the event horizon of a black hole formed?

The event horizon is formed when a massive star runs out of fuel and collapses under its own gravity, becoming so dense that even light cannot escape its gravitational pull.

3. Can anything pass through the event horizon of a black hole?

No, once an object crosses the event horizon, it is pulled into the black hole and cannot escape or be observed from outside the black hole.

4. Can the event horizon of a black hole change in size?

The event horizon of a black hole can only grow larger as it absorbs more matter, but it cannot shrink or disappear.

5. What happens at the event horizon of a black hole?

At the event horizon, the gravity of the black hole is so strong that time and space are distorted, and the laws of physics as we know them break down.

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