mppharmacy said:
So, if the end of the craft that crosses the event horizon tried to send data back to the other end of the craft that had not 'crossed over' and then let's say the craft was designed to separate so that half enters the black hole and the other half speeds back away from the event horizon to avoid capture, would any of that data from the 'front' of the craft within the black hole actually transmit back to the part of the craft that didn't cross over? I'm guessing no, because nothing that crosses over the event horizon would ever escape?
As other posters have suggest, the situation is similar to the following.
Suppose you are in a spacecraft , very long, split into two parts.
A light beam (which best represents the event horizon, in the ship frame it's better to think of the event horizon as a trapped beam of light rather than a place) strikes the front of the spaceship.
If the rear of the spaceship starts accelerating after the light beam has hit the front of the ship, but before the light beam hits the rear (in which case it will be too late!), it can outrun the beam of light. (This may be surprising if you aren't already familiar with it, but it's a consequence of relativity, see the wiki article on
Hyperbolic Motion
Lets suppose the acceleration starts "at the same time" as when the light beam hits the front of the ship, where "at the same time" is measured in the ship frame.
If your spaceship is a light year long, the required acceleration for the rear of the ship to outrun the light beam would be approximately 1g. (The forumula is acceleration * distance = c^2). If it is only a mile long, the required acceleration is about 6*10^12 g. (Good luck with achieving that!).
This acceleration won't be enough to pull away from the black hole, BTW - it will be just enough to hold station.
THis is essentially what happens near a very massive black hole, look up "Rindler Horizon" if you want more background.
If the rear of the ship does not accelerate at 6*10^12 g immediatley as soon as the light beam reaches the front, the rear of the ship will be sucked in too.
Let' suppose the front of the ship emits a light beam when it crosses the horizon. (THis is a bit redundant, really, because the emitted light beam travels along with the horizon, which is another light beam).
If the rear of the ship doesn't accelerate, it will see the light beam representing the horizon, and The light beam emitted from the front of the spaceship at the same time that the front of the ship reached the horizon at the same time. In other terms, this is equivalent to saying the rear of the ship will see the front of the ship crossing the horizon when it itself crosses the horizon.
If the rear of the ship does accelerate, it will outrun both the beam of light from the event horizon, and the beam of light emitted by the front of the ship when the event horizon reached it, so it will see neither one.