Re: light inside a black hole




"RichD" <r_delaney2001@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:c55bda8e-3277-45ef-b1b3-fae629b9c92f@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You have fallen through the horizon, heading
straight for the singularity.


Because the inverse square law still applies and you are not a point,
the end of you closest to the origin of gravity experiences a greater
force than the end of you furthest from the origin. Consequently
you are stretched, one end falling faster than the other and you
break up before reaching any horizon.

You shine a flashlight
in the direction directly opposite, away from
the singularity. What path does it follow?

The flashlight breaks up too. Like this:
http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=Shoemaker+Levy&meta=

.



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