markusschaber wrote:markusschaber wrote:I had to think a bit about this one, I could not get my mind around it.
Strong gravity is what defines a black hole. At and behind the event horizon, gravity is so strong that it prevents even light from getting out of it.
And black holes don't have a "sharp edge", there is a gravitational funnel arount the event horizon which pulls objects into the funnel, towards the event horizon, just not strong enough to catch light. The strength of the force reduces exponentially with the distance to the center of the gravitation.
And grav sensors detect gravity. Faster than light.
So I just have problems understanding how any black hole, even a very short lived artificial one, should be undetectable by grav sensors.
tlb wrote:Particularly, since he is talking about a transient event, so any sensor that is outside of the event horizon is going to see a large apparent mass appear and then disappear. I do not know if this will cause a ripple on the Alpha wall (which is what the gravitic arrays sense), but it will certainly cause a graviton pulse.
penny wrote:There will be no gravity for the grav sensors to detect. Again, black holes are responsible for a phenomena called 'frame dragging' which drags the entire local frame of reference down with it. Local space, and all of the gravity surrounding it (including the gravity on the outside of the black hole) is being dragged inside. Picture a crowded fairgrounds where everyone is moving in one direction and one person is attempting to move against the grain. That is not what is happening. The entire frame of reference is being dragged in. Sensors have to have something to sense. There will not be anything for the sensors to detect.
Graviton pulse??? There is nothing special about a graviton. It has the same speed limit as a photon. It will not escape.
The "It will not escape" is valid for the event horizon and everything behind it. It's not valid for the space outside of the event horizon, which is still affected heavily by the gravity, but not strong enough for the "nothing will escape".
It is valid for the
frame that is being dragged.
When a black hole forms from imploding gravity,
the local frame of reference is being dragged in.
There is some truth in sci-fi -- for instance the movie
Event Horizon -- when the Captain tells the navigator not to get too close to the event horizon. There is a danger from getting too close, even though
too close is not the same as
crossing the event horizon. The grav waves and the light waves that are near -- but on the outside of -- the event horizon are stronger than in "normal space." Therefore a drag is placed upon matter that is too close. If the ship's engines are powerful enough to overcome the currents on the outer perimeter of the maelstrom then no harm no foul.
"Reverse engines."
"We are still being pulled in Captain."
"Full reverse. All power to engines."
"We are breaking free."
The same thing is witnessed at the beach with rip tides. You simply cannot get too close to a rip current if you are a weak swimmer. If you get too close you will be pulled under. *
Rip current speeds as high as 8 feet per second have been measured--faster than an Olympic swimmer can sprint! This makes rip currents especially dangerous to beachgoers as these currents can sweep even the strongest swimmer out to sea.
The difference when it comes to photons and gravitons is that they will also be pulled on by the implosion of the star. Photons and gravity are not sentient. They will not have the motivation or the need to resist being caught in the pull of the mighty beast. In addition, space-time -- the aforementioned frame dragging -- is pulling the very rug (fabric of space) out from under the photons and gravitons.*
*Even if Usain Bolt is fast enough to outrun the effects, he can't because he can't get a grip on the track, the track (space-time) is being pulled out from under him.
All of the rest of gravity and light that is far enough away to be unaffected is insignificant. It is still there as it was before the singularity formed. FTL detectors don't care about the normal grav waves and photons that were there before the singularity. They are innocent bystanders.
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The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.