Hey, if you want a really mind-blowing physics question....
How does anything actually fall into a black hole?
Once you get to the event horizon, time dilation tends to infinity!
So you would never actually get there?![]()
No, the apparant slowing down of the object approaching the black hole only applies to what a distant observer sees. The object continues to accelerate until tidal forces destroy it, then the individual atoms are drawn through the event horizon. It just doesn't look like that from a distance.
Narrative is the worst enemy of content.JOHN has a poor understanding of proper noun capitalisation.

Hey, if you want a really mind-blowing physics question....
How does anything actually fall into a black hole?
Once you get to the event horizon, time dilation tends to infinity!
So you would never actually get there?![]()
Some pretty pro-click arguments in this thread. For bonus points:
JOHN has one sandwich which he cuts in half. How many sandwiches does JOHN have?
But the object falling into the Black hole would also experience time dilation, For it, it would take forever to get past the EH.
How does this work?


When it comes to black holes its spaghettification that will do you in fast.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghettification
But the object falling into the Black hole would also experience time dilation, For it, it would take forever to get past the EH.
How does this work?
When it comes to black holes its spaghettification that will do you in fast.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghettification