ray b said:
yes BUT nothing falls slowly into the Earth in a much much smaller gravity well and I am unaware of any brakes on a BH esp one falling into a multi-million solar mass BH
a few meter /per second may be true for a rest mass at an event horizon for the first second, over a few minutes no as seconds add up BUT the pair of black holes willnot be at rest or slow at that point
what is the ratio of excape V to infalling V for a BH
if a few solar mass BH has a excape V of greater than light speed does not a bigger one have a higher excape speed and a higher accelleration do to G tooo
quite so, if the falling object had - relative to the BH - exactly zero transverse speed to start with. Since that's extremely rare, nothing will fall straight into a BH, rather spiral in. On its way it will likely encounter all manner of things to slow it down - other matter spiralling in, photons, debris from collisions, ...
In the case of two SMBH, nuclei of galaxies for example, the relative transverse speed will be enormous, many km/s, so they will orbit round the common centre of mass, spiralling in as enormous amouts of gravitational radiation is emitted and the binary loses energy.
you have been in a quasar resently?? yes many galaxies have quite centers and a single black hole at their centers, now, BUT they are NOT QUASARs, now,
some strange event causes the quazar and then it ends
a pair or more of BHs coming together is my BEST GUESS
and once they go inside the EH the show is over
If you have any observational results showing that quasars are, in fact, binary SMBH, please share them with us.
The results of surveys such as 2dF point to something called pure luminosity evolution for quasars - from about z~=3 down, quasars seem to become less intrinsically luminous. I'm not sure how well theories are consistent with the actual data, but it's suggestive of the SMBH slowly consuming the available 'fuel' and becoming dimmer.
if simple dust falling into a BH could power a quasar then there should be more smaller quasars
There are plenty of 'small quasars', they're called (variously) BL Lac objects, Seyfert galaxies, and AGN galaxies.
