spacecadet11 said:
If at the event horizon..the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light..
Pop science presentations often give this description, but you have to be careful how you interpret it. It is true that, once something is at or inside the horizon of a black hole, it can never escape. One could describe this as the "escape velocity" being equal to the speed of light at the horizon, and being greater than the speed of light inside the horizon. But that doesn't prevent the horizon or the region inside it from existing. It just means spacetime there doesn't work the way you are used to.
spacecadet11 said:
or time at that 'point' comes to a halt..
It doesn't. Skhaaan's description is basically correct; the only thing I would add to it is that observer 2, since he is spatially separated from observer 1, has to be careful interpreting his observations of observer 1. The fact that he sees observer 1's clock slow down, and his light signals get redder and redder, does not mean observer 1 has "really" had his clock slow down, and it does not prevent observer 1 from reaching and falling inside the horizon. Again, all this really means is that spacetime at or inside a black hole's horizon doesn't work the way you are used to.
spacecadet11 said:
how can anything get past or thru the horizon and make the journey to the center of a black hole?
By falling in. ;)
spacecadet11 said:
does a material object approaching a black hole increase it's velocity towards it?
This question assumes that the "velocity" of the object is a unique, well-defined property. It isn't. In order to make the question well-defined, we have to specify how the velocity is measured, and by which observer(s).
Here's one way to do it, which makes the answer to your question "yes": suppose we have a fleet of observers all "hovering" at constant altitudes above the hole's horizon, but a different altitude for each observer. Each observer measures the velocity of the infalling object as it passes by him (so it's a local measurement and has a unique, well-defined result). The "hovering" observers closer to the hole's horizon will measure the infalling object's velocity to be larger; in the limit as the "hovering" observer's altitude above the horizon approaches zero, the velocity he measures for the infalling object approaches the speed of light.
However, this method of measuring the "velocity" of the infalling object can be interpreted another way. Notice that, as the "hovering" observers get closer to the horizon, they have to accelerate harder and harder to maintain altitude (in the limit as the altitude above the horizon goes to zero, the acceleration required goes to infinity). So from the viewpoint of the infalling object, the reason its velocity relative to the "hovering" observers gets closer and closer to the speed of light is that those observers are accelerating towards him harder and harder. In the limit, when the infalling object passes the horizon itself, the horizon is moving outward, relative to the object,
at the speed of light. See further comments below.
spacecadet11 said:
is there anything located past the event horizon that is not radiation?
Yes; any object that falls through the horizon will be located "past" (i.e., inside) it, at least until it hits the singularity at the center and is destroyed. See further comments below.
spacecadet11 said:
No mass can reach the speed of light..but black holes can get more massive by pulling in material.
Yes. See my description above of the infalling object passing "hovering" observers closer and closer to the horizon, and finally passing the horizon itself. The reason the object's velocity relative to the horizon is the speed of light is that the
horizon is moving outward at the speed of light;
it is the lightlike "object". The infalling object remains perfectly normal throughout.