wywong said:
Both links say I won't see the future and that is what I couldn't comprehend. My rationale was: I am catching up with future, so whatever future event it is, it is a past event to me before I cross the event horizon. So their use of the term 'future' didn't make sense to me. Of course I was mistaken. From the POV of Alice, although I am not yet cross the horizon, her flash cannot catch up with me because I am accelerating away. From my POV Alice is still future when I cross the event horizon.
But that doesn't mean I can't see future events like Alice's flash. Before I reach the singularity, I might see her flash. See
http://www.engr.mun.ca/~ggeorge/astron/blackholes.html"
The fall through the event horizon is survivable, but the fall through the Cauchy horizon is not. All the light which will ever fall on the black hole in the entire future of the Universe will catch up with the observer before he crosses the Cauchy horizon. Looking up out of the hole he will view the entire, possibly infinitely long, history of the Universe from light whose blueshift and energy increase without limit, all in a matter of seconds. The energy falling on the observer at the instant of crossing the Cauchy horizon will be infinite.
That is somewhat like what I envisaged in my thought experiment but is contrary to either of the above links.
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This is a case where you have to really read the find print. You will note if you read carefully that the author is not talking about the standard event horizon, but the inner horizon (also known as the Cauchy horizon) of a rotating balck hole (and not a non-rotating black hole). Note that this also gets talked about in one of the FAQ's, right after the section I snipped, in the section about rotating black holes. So there isn't any real inconsistency in the references.
This is an interesting issue in its own right, which I'll talk about a bit more later. At the moment, I want to point out that it doesn't have anything to do with the simpler issue that we started out discussing, the issue of falling through the event horizon of a non-rotating black hole, or even the issue of falling through the outer (NOT the inner or Cauchy) horizon of a rotating black hole.
In both of these cases (falling through the event horizon of a non-rotating black hole, or through the outer event horizon of a rotating black hole) there is no infinite blue shift, and one does not see the entire history of the universe play out. One will not be "flash fried" as one travels through the event horizon.
Probably the easiest way to explain why your intuition about this case is wrong is to point out that the infalling observer is moving near the speed of light. A crude (and non-rigorous) way of describing the situation is that one has infinite gravitational blue-shift, which is counteracted by an opposite infinite red shift due to one's infalling velocity. The actual result is not really defined by this crude argument, but a more careful analysis shows that an observer falling through a black hole observers experiences only finite redshifts or blueshifts, the exact value of which depends on his trajectory (and the direction in which he looks). This is basically yet another case where the singularity of the Schwarzschild coordinate system obscures the physics.
I'll now digress a bit and talk about the case you raised, the interesting case of the inner horizon of the rotating black hole.
The analysis you posted quotes from, while widespread, is somewhat idealized, for the Cauchy horizon is probably not actually stable. What destablizes the inner horizon of a rotating black hole is is the infalling radiation, which gets blueshifted to infinite energy. The perturbing effects of this energy were not included in the analysis, which means that this analysis, will fairly widely reported, is not very good, because it is ignoring effects of infinite magnitude.
Because of this instability, the exact inner structure of rotating black holes is currently under some debate.
The best reference I'm aware of for the actual geometry of a rotating black hole is
http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/9902008. The shortest summary of the result is that this case is still under investigation. I do not fully understand the "mass inflation" singularity that the authors talk about as being likely (but not yet proven) to exist inside a rotating black hole, or its effects on an infalling observer. I gather that the Penrose and Israel paper http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v63/i16/p1663_1 is the paper to read to learn more about this issue, but I haven't gotten it from the library yet to study it.
pervect said:
Have you actually been reading any of the web references I've been posting on this fascinating subject, or have you just been making stuff up out of your own imagination?
The answer to both questions is yes. I even had read Kip Thorne's Black Hole book which thankfully doesn't contain many equations.
OK, I'm glad you've been doing some reading, and I'm especially glad that you've read Kip Thorne's excellent book. I'm pretty sure that you'll find that Kip Thorne also comes to the same conclusion that I and the references I've quoted have come to as far as falling through the outer event horizon.
My final thought experiment is flawed, but I still think my other questions are legitimate. Most of the references I read are based on the infalling object's POV. What I am interested in is a safe observer's POV.
The short answer is that simultaneity is relative. I don't find it useful to say that "existence is relative" personally, so the "frozen star" model does not appeal to me. Furthermore, I find that it (the frozen star model) confuses people on issues such as the points that you've raised, such as the fact that one does not see the entire history of the universe when falling through the (outer) event horizon.
To make the question of the "frozen star" vs "already collapsed" model, one would have to come up with a thought experiment where the two models actually differed.
We've already been through one thought experiment, which basically supports the "non-frozen" star model, though I suppose a re-wording of the "frozen star" model could still save it.
Note that if no difference between the two models can be found, the issue becomes one of personal preference and philosophy, rather than science.