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by millstone
4536 days ago
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> while a stone thrown up from below the event horizon would cross the event horizon just fine on the way up and on the way down and would return back down successfully in its proper time This doesn't agree with my understanding of GR. A stone "thrown up" from within a black hole interior cannot cross the event horizon in any reference frame - it cannot even get closer to it. Look at the future light cones within the black hole interior, e.g. in the illustration at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eddington–Finkelstein_coordinat.... The future light cone of every event within the EH is skewed so far that even light rays directed outwards are drawn closer to the singularity. |
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The Schwarzschild radius of the mass of the observable Universe is 10B light years. So, several billions years ago, when observable Universe had 10B radius, it would be a black hole (though i think that in less expanded space of the earlier Universe the constants like "c" had different values and thus that Schwarzschild radius was less). We can imagine it in another way - increase 125 times (the observable Universe has 40+B light years radius) the amount of matter, ie. galaxies, stars, etc... inside the 10B radius ball around us, and you'd get the black hole with 10B light years Schwarzschild radius (and i don't think we would ever notice the change - only with time the galaxies's movement will be affected). Obviously, the gravitational field on the surface of that imaginary 10B radius sphere and inside it would increase somewhat (like 125 times on the surface, 125 times 0 pretty much 0) - not even close though to any values to affect space curvature or to prevent anything from crossing it from inside. Of course, anything that would cross it from inside would return back eventually.