Jonathan_S wrote:penny wrote:Apples and oranges. You are mashing two different things. A black hole is a massive object that bends space-time, the very fabric of space. If you take a bed sheet stretched out and held by several people and then you place a massive bowling ball in the middle of the sheet, then everything on the sheet will fall towards the ball, right? Do you think anything will fall from the bowling ball to the people?
Just because the massive black hole is a voracious greedy witch that is trying to suck more gravity and matter into it, should impress upon you that it ain't giving any up. A black hole is not prejudiced. It is an equal opportunity destroyer.
But that stretched out, that bent, spacetime is what we know as gravity.
No it isn't. That is simply the
effects of gravity.
Jonathan_S wrote:So, I don't understand what two things you're saying are getting mashed together?
The two distinctly different things under discussion that are getting mashed up are ...
1. Does gravity escape a black hole?
2. Does gravity exist outside a black hole?
Of course gravity exists outside a black hole. Because matter exists outside a black hole. All matter has gravity. And all objects of matter have a natural gravitational attraction to each other. A black hole is a massive object that has an attraction. There is observational evidence that all galaxies have a black hole at its center. Thus, there is a black hole at the center of our galaxy. Does gravity exist on the outside of our black hole? Of course, we live on a big blue ball of gravity. And one day, Earth too will fall into our own black hole. Does that mean that once Earth falls into our galaxy's black hole that it, or its crushed mass, will emerge? No.
Jonathan_S wrote:Mass creates curvature in spacetime, curvature in spacetime imparts a force (which we call gravity) towards the mass that's bending spacetime; thus altering their velocity (and thus trajectory).
Because the bent spacetime extends beyond the event horizon why wouldn't the creation of that bent spacetime around the black hole create ripples on the alpha wall? (ripples which could be detected FTL by grav sensors) It'd certainly produce detectable changes when the lightspeed propagation of the change in spacetime reached any objects being tracked within the system.
Wedges are intense bands of gravity and they do not create ripples along the Alpha wall
while in n-space. Only when a wedge transitions from hyper does it create ripples on the Alpha wall. Now, because I am not an expert on the author's tech, I do not know what actually causes the ripple on the Alpha wall when a ship enters n-space.* IINM, it is the ship's mass and acceleration. The mass of the ship - and I would wager its acceleration - and it's effects thereof would be hidden/masked/impeded by a black hole. I agree the black hole would have an effect on its surroundings. But didn't even the NASA article tlb posted state that if our own Sun was a black hole our planets orbits would not be affected? Why?
Frame of reference.
*Nor am I an expert on black holes, but I studied event horizons for a long long time and I have my own theories.
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The artist formerly known as cthia.
Now I can talk in the third person.