Discussion Overview
The discussion revolves around the nature of black hole mergers as observed through gravitational waves, particularly in the context of recent detections by aLIGO. Participants explore the implications of these observations on the understanding of time and event horizons during the merger process.
Discussion Character
- Exploratory
- Debate/contested
- Technical explanation
Main Points Raised
- Some participants assert that two black holes should not be seen merging in finite time from a distant observer's perspective, due to the nature of event horizons.
- Others argue that the merging black holes are not static and isolated, allowing for gravitational waves (GWs) to be detected from outside the merged black hole's horizon.
- A participant explains that while the merger occurs in finite proper time, the distant observer must consider coordinate time, which is affected by gravitational redshift.
- There is a discussion about the dynamic nature of the spacetime region during GW emission, suggesting that intuitions about gravitational time dilation may not apply as they would for a stationary black hole.
- One participant raises a question about the implications of a neutron star and black hole merger, speculating on the strength of GWs emitted in such a scenario compared to black hole-black hole mergers.
- Another participant mentions that LIGO has templates for neutron star-black hole mergers, indicating that such events are also expected to be detectable.
Areas of Agreement / Disagreement
Participants express differing views on the nature of time during black hole mergers and the visibility of events to distant observers. There is no consensus on the implications of merging black holes versus neutron star-black hole mergers, and the discussion remains unresolved regarding the specifics of gravitational wave emissions in these scenarios.
Contextual Notes
Participants note the complexity of defining time for distant observers and the role of simultaneity conventions. The discussion highlights the limitations in understanding the dynamics of merging black holes and the effects of gravitational redshift on observations.