Nuclear Fusion in the Singularity

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Th_Kramer
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I'm wondering if it would be possible to have nuclear fusion of very heavy atoms in the singularity of a black hole, and as a bonus, another question about a hypothetical situation.
Would it be possible for Black Holes to undergo nuclear fusion of materials with very high atomic numbers (above 118 or the majority of known atoms) in their singularity, producing any signs, including photons across the spectrum? Furthermore, I was thinking aloud and wondering, what prevents the contained energy from becoming so immense that at some point in this fusion, black holes end up causing a kind of 'supernova' and scattering their matter around?
 
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You're probably thinking of the singularity as a point of infinite density. Unfortunately, this is a very wrong picture of what the singularity inside a black hole is - as others have noted, it's more like a moment in time than a place in space.

Is it possible that super-heavy elements form inside a black hole from collisions between infalling matter? Possibly - not very likely, IMO. Accretion discs and stars seem more likely candidates. It'd all be ripped apart again before reaching the singularity anyway. And no, transforming energy from one form to another changes nothing about the black hole.
 
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Th_Kramer said:
Would it be possible for Black Holes to undergo nuclear fusion of materials with very high atomic numbers (above 118 or the majority of known atoms) in their singularity, producing any signs, including photons across the spectrum?
What happens when you feed a neutron star, and is that fusion?
What is the atomic weight of a neutron star?
 
Baluncore said:
What happens when you feed a neutron star, and is that fusion?
What is the atomic weight of a neutron star?
Atoms do not exist in the core of a neutron star. It's mostly smushed together neutrons plus some protons, electrons, kaons.

When hydrogen falls onto the surface it accumulates until there is a starwide thermonuclear explosion as it fuses. Eventually it fuses to iron I guess. Further down in the mantle are heavier elements. This is where uranium, gold, etc come from
 
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