Imax
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Mass can curve space-time. Is it possible that space-time around a black hole is so badly curved that it forms a closed 4D manifold?
Imax said:Mass can curve space-time. Is it possible that space-time around a black hole is so badly curved that it forms a closed 4D manifold?
No. Now, you can make a closed 4D manifold that includes a black hole within it, but you can also place a black hole within an open 4D manifold. The black hole itself isn't able to have much of an impact on the space-time geometry far from itself.Imax said:Mass can curve space-time. Is it possible that space-time around a black hole is so badly curved that it forms a closed 4D manifold?
The difference is that there would also be no trajectory for anything to enter black hole B.Imax said:The reason I’m asking this question is because I can imagine having two black holes, A and B. Black hole A is a “classic” black hole, where gravity is so strong that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light. Nothing can exceed the speed of light, so nothing can escape black hole A. On the other hand, the curvature of space-time around black hole B is so bad that it forms a closed space-time manifold. If you’re inside black hole B, then it doesn’t matter which x, y, z direction you choose or how long you travel in that direction. You can never escape black hole B because there’s no space-time trajectory you can follow to bring you out of black hole B.
If I’m looking at black holes A and B from a safe distance, then I should see exactly the same thing, nothing. If I’m an outside observer, I can’t make a distinction between black holes A and B.
Well, they don't go around gobbling everything in their path. Far away, they have the exact same gravitational field as any other spherically-symmetric object their mass, but a much smaller radius and thus most things end up just missing a black hole.Imax said:That’s exactly what I’m wondering about. If space-time formed a closed manifold around a black hole, then there would be no trajectory out but there would be no trajectory in. Maybe black holes don’t go around gobbling everything in their path.
Kevin_Axion said:but is positioned to create a new degree of freedom.