What Happens Inside a Black Hole Beyond the Event Horizon?

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the nature of black holes, particularly what occurs beyond the event horizon. Participants clarify that once inside the event horizon, one cannot distinguish between being inside or outside a black hole without calculations. The inevitable fate is to be drawn towards the singularity, leading to destruction. Resources such as Andrew Hamilton's simulations from UC Boulder provide visual representations of falling into a black hole, illustrating the light distortion effects and the appearance of the event horizon.

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  • Explore Andrew Hamilton's black hole simulations at UC Boulder.
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super_kangaro
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I was wondering about black holes.

If you could some how go inside a black hole without dieing, being turned into a spaghetti, become part of the black hole, or anything else of that sort. Would there be absolutly nothing around you, would you teleport, or go back in time. What would happen?

I know this question is absolutly ridiculous and i know I explained it poorly.
But... I just want to know what's inside a black hole.

Thanks for reading my post :)
 
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Neglecting all those unpleasant effects you described, you wouldn't be able to tell whether you were inside or outside the event horizon of a black hole (unless you did some calculation, or tried to get out of it). You would just continue to move to the center of the black hole, where there would be some singularity which would inevitably destroy you. That's all.

The funny thing is, that if you tried to get out (or actually stop free-falling, so accelerate in any way whatsoever) it would happen sooner.
 
Tere is some software to simulate the fall into it?
 
google "andrew hamilton"

the first hit should be the homepage of a guy at UC Boulder who has some animations and graphics like this:
http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/singularity.html

AFAIK he doesn't have software to download but he has stuff to watch
 
Here's another webpage by CASA (Centre for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy) which appears to add graphics to Hamiltons simulations-

http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/insidebh/index.html

Steve
 
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Just for clarity, it should be noted that 'inside' a black hole is usually construed as meaning inside the event horizon. There is no 'inside' to the singularity. Stick with supermassive black holes if you elect to carry out this rather one sided experiment. You could pass through the event horizon without being pasta-fied in a really big one.
 
I always thought that a black hole was litterally a black flat infinitly deep hole.

Thanks for the links and answer to my question:)

So in conclusion all there is in a black hole is death.
 
You end up in another dimension ? Another universe?
 
If you ended up in the tenth dimension that would be weird because you would be like god.
 
  • #10
If you can't tell if you were inside or outside of a black hole, wouldn't that mean that you're in another dimension? The human mind isn't wired to perceive objects in other dimensions. Also a black hole may just be a fourth dimensional object passing through the third dimension. But honestly, I have no idea what I'm talking about. I'm a 14 year old kid who can't fall asleep.
 
  • #11
super_kangaro said:
I always thought that a black hole was litterally a black flat infinitly deep hole.

So in conclusion all there is in a black hole is death.
Just think of a black hole as a hole in three dimensions.

And yes, a black hole is just death :P
Death and the edge of known physics.
 
  • #12
Chronos said:
You could pass through the event horizon without being pasta-fied in a really big one.

Disclaimer: once you pass through the event-horizon though, you will inevitably be drawn closer to the singularity, and you will be pasta-fied. (Don't try to avoid it, you will only make it happen sooner). So don't try this at home!
 
  • #13
super_kangaro said:
I always thought that a black hole was litterally a black flat infinitly deep hole.
From a distance outside, the event horizon will appear like a black sphere. It will bend light around it. See the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole" for a rendering of this.
An interesting thing is that, as you approach the black hole, the light distortion will make it appear that the event horizon is swallowing you up. At 1.5 Schwarzschild radius, the event horizon will appear like a level horizon. Closer than this, and the incoming light shrinks to a smaller disk.
Note that inside of a black hole is not all black, you can still see things, though highly distorted.
CompuChip said:
Disclaimer: once you pass through the event-horizon though, you will inevitably be drawn closer to the singularity, and you will be pasta-fied. (Don't try to avoid it, you will only make it happen sooner). So don't try this at home!
If you try this at home, the black hole will suck up Earth.
 
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  • #14
Note that inside of a black hole is not all black, you can still see things, though highly distorted.

Are you sure of this?
 
  • #15
Drakkith said:
Are you sure of this?
This site has some line-diagram-renderings of falling into a black hole.
http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/singularity.html
It addresses that when inside a black hole, you can still see the outside universe.
 
  • #16
FtlIsAwesome said:
This site has some line-diagram-renderings of falling into a black hole.
http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/singularity.html
It addresses that when inside a black hole, you can still see the outside universe.

Oh ok, I see what you're talking about.
 

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