Originally posted by Shirley
Would it be possible for a star to be so large that the light emitting from it was redshifted beyond detection?
I had a question that I wanted to puzzle out in a research paper, but it seems easier to find questions than answers.
Anyway, thanks in advance,
John
It is clear from your other post that you are not talking about Hawking radiation from a black hole but conventional starlight from a dense cooling star.
"Beyond detection" depends on circumstances, such as distance to star etc.
Would you be satisfied with a gravitational redshift of 1000?
This is the redshift which the CMB has undergone so that instead of visible light it is called "microwave". If a factor of 1000 is not enough to make the light unrecognizable by your standards, then what is?
It seems to me to be a meaningful question. I urge you not to give up on it.
You are asking for something that let's light escape from its surface but that by the time the light has gotten clear of the star it is
extremely redshifted---say by a factor of 1000, to be definite.
Think about a neutron star that is still very hot and glowing.
Imagine that it is ALMOST but not quite massive enough to turn into a black hole.
I will look in Frank shu's astrophysics textbook and tell you the radius of this neutron star and you can see if its grav redshift far from the star is more than 1000.
It looks like this poster may have just come in, gotten the earlier answers, and is now gone for good, but I'll follow through anyway.
This is a good question. It is not automatic that you are talking about a black hole, what you said was it let's out its light but the light is strongly redshifted by the time it gets far away from the star.