Now, I know that tittle is messy, so I'm going to explain it as clearly I can. One of the proofs to the fact that time is relative is, as I've heard. Putting one clock on the ground, and another a few feets above it. When these clocks measure time, the one above the ground will do it faster...
Flicking through quite a few topics here, I have seen that everyone says we can't get to see anything fall into the black hole as it would take ∞ time for us.
Now, I'm a bit bugged here. Can someone explain me why it is like that.
Also, haven't we seen stars fall into black holes through...
Please correct me if I have made a mistake, but as I know, being closer to large masses will slow the time for you. And I know Einstein thought of that, but my question is... how? How could he get to it by mere thinking? I do understand he had great imagination, but again...
Uh, I don't know if this suits the topic, but I've been wondering about this.
Are we more times bigger than the smallest particle we know about than we are smaller than the large stars?