PeterDonis said:
...so a real particle falling into a black hole will increase its mass, not decrease it.
... The hole's gravity then pulls the negative energy particle inside the horizon before it can annihilate with the positive energy particle; the positive energy particle then flies away and escapes. The net effect of this is to decrease the mass of the hole, by effectively transferring some of it to the particle that escapes.
But all of this talk about virtual particle pairs, and one having negative energy, is, as I said, heuristic only; the underlying math doesn't really look like that. So there's a limit to how much understanding you can get with this model. Also, the model can lead you to ask questions that aren't really well-defined, like this one:
this is what i deduced, once the virtual particle becomes a real particle, by reason of being permanently separated from virtualness, and falls into the black hole, that mass of the singularity is increased, as you and phinds educated me, be it the particle or anti-particle.
but here you say it is the "negative energy particle" that falls into the hole. 50 50 says over time equal amount of both particles fall in. so if both particles have mass, then either one into the hole increases its mass, thus increases singularity mass.
once permanently separated, don't both particles -anti matter and matter- take on equal amounts of mass? one into the hole the other on its way to eat lunch in albuquerque? and the conservation of energy says then that somewhere energy must equally decrease, so let it be that the energy mass of the singularity must pay, so it decreases by the same amount of energy that equals the matter plus anit-matter pair?
as soon as the virtual pair are sufficiently kept separate by the just severe enough curvature located at the event horizon, at that moment of "whoops too late to annihilation" musn't mass decrease in the singularity equal to the sum of mass created in the opposite now real pair? that event horizon located at a real spacetime distance away from the singularity which contains the mass influencing the spacetime around it. so there is an entanglement of mass/energy within the singularity and the mass/energy virtual to real pair located at the event horizon?
i suppose the the now real matter or anti-matter particle which escapes cannot annihilate the opposite virtual particle of a virtual pair adjacent to it as it escapes? which then cascades into infinity, preventing me from asking this question?
yah, that was a silly question, but remember, there are at least 10 silly questions to every real progression in the advancement of science. its a law. so, 9 more silly questions until my mind progresses! thank you for your kind indulgence!