B Gravastar vs. Neutron Stars: A New Theory for Black Hole Formation?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the concept of Gravastars, a theoretical type of stellar remnant that may resemble neutron stars but does not collapse into a black hole. Participants express skepticism about the feasibility of such objects, questioning whether they can possess sufficient mass to create a gravity well that prevents light from escaping without forming a singularity. There is a call for credible scientific references to support the claims made about Gravastars and their relation to gravitational waves. The conversation highlights the need for substantiated information, as speculative threads can lead to confusion. The thread is temporarily locked for further expert input on the topic.
darkmattermonkey
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Has anyone else heard of that gravity waves may be the result of another type of supernova remains, called a Grav-Star? It seems almost to physically mimic a neuron star but stopped just shy of becoming a black hole, yet it still has enough of a gravity well to prevent light from escaping. Is that even possible? To have enough mass to have black body absorbtion properties but not enough to become a sinking (into space-time fabric) singularity. Sounds highly improbable. Thoughts?
 
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darkmattermonkey said:
Has anyone else heard of that gravity waves may be the result of another type of supernova remains, called a Grav-Star?

never heard of it, nor has google

please supply GOOD scientific references to where you are reading this
 
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My immediate thought was a neutron star which was dense enough to have a photon sphere, but not so dense as to form a black hole. But then I know nooothing, as Manuel so elegantly put it.
 
We really need to have some kind of decent reference. Threads like this one, without some kind of substantiation, achieve very little. I'll check back in a day and see where we are.
 
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Okay -
Gravastar - alternative explanation for black holes
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravastar

This kind of thing is on the edge of what PF discusses. I am locking the thread until a mentor who knows about this can figure out where we stand.
 
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