Silvertail said:
A thought experiment. c is considered to be a constant speed, that can not be exceeded.
No. All observers measure the same speed for light in a vacuum. We say that c is "invariant", not "constant". The difference is quite subtle though.
Once light passes the event horizon of a black hole however, the gravitational pull is strong enough to exceed, C.
That sentence does not mean anything.
The event horizon of a black hole is where the
escape velocity is greater than the speed of light. Not gravity.
This is indicated by the supposition, that not even light can escape the event horizon of a black hole.
Which depends on what you mean by "escape the event horizon".
Consider: classically, on the Earth, if you fire a projectile slower than the escape velocity at the surface of the Earth then it may still escape the surface. i.e. it flies through the air. Of course this escape is temporary - unless it gets fired into an orbit. Fired
at the escape velocity, and the projectile does not come back down ...
So what about Exotic Matter? If a particle with negative mass were to somehow pass the event horizon of a black hole, would it not then be repelled from the black hole at a velocity greater then c?
You are considering the possibility of antigravity.
The short answer is "no" - exotic matter would not exceed the speed of light either, it would just get a lot of kinetic energy. But, since gravity is repulsive for the object you are considering, you would have to do work on it to bring it close to the BH. The same reasoning that says that light does not escape also means the exotic-matter does not get in.
The relationships are not so simple though - I'm sure one of the others will be keen to talk about where I am cringingly oversimplifying things :)