Looking out from a event horizon

In summary: The relative velocity between any material object whatsoever, and the event horizon, will be c, no matter how fast the object moves.This is because the event horizon is a point, and anything that moves past it will have its velocity multiplied by c.
  • #1
Vidar Martinsen
11
0
Lets look at the known story of Alice and Bob outside a Black hole. Alice are falling inn to the hole, and Bob are outside.

What would Alice observe from the event horizon of a Black hole. Looking outward.

We know Bob who is outside, se Allices clock standing still, but Allices clock are not standing sill according to her, so would she se the clock outside running incredible fast. Actual infinite fast, if her clock was standing still.

Or is there another explanation here?.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Vidar Martinsen said:
so would she se the clock outside running incredible fast.
Not if she is actually falling (= no thrust to hover close to the black hole), because you have to take the Doppler effect into account.
There are literally thousands of websites and multiple forum threads here describing all the different views in detail.
 
  • Like
Likes m4r35n357
  • #3
Also note that it is exactly as impossible to hover at the event horizon as it is for body with mass to travel at c. For any observer falling through the event horizon, they would not be able to locally detect this (per classical physics), nor would they see any change in what they observed looking out as they passed the event horizon. They would see essentially the same blueshift just below the horizon as they saw just above it. The amount would depend on initial conditions and thrust applied (it could even be redshift).
 
  • #4
One of the websites that has some views of what you "see" when you fall into a black hole is http://jila.colorado.edu/~ajsh/insidebh/schw.html

Note that they interpret "see" literally. It shows you what a camera would photograph. Also, while they show the view from a couple of different trajectories, I don't think they have one for "falling straight in".

As far as seeing goes - often people want a mental model, rather than a camera photograph. This is harder to communicate, and I'm not sure if it's possible without getting heavy into math.
 
  • Like
Likes edguy99 and m4r35n357
  • #5
Would she see anything at all?
She will be accelerating towards whatever the singularity is at a faster rate than any photons (or anything else) which fell in after her.
 
  • #6
rootone said:
Would she see anything at all?
She will be accelerating towards whatever the singularity is at a faster rate than any photons (or anything else) which fell in after her.
Wrong. She will see the world outside virtually unchanged from just before passing the horizon to just after. Inward directed photons would overtake a free-faller inside the horizon just as easily as outside.
 
  • Like
Likes rootone
  • #7
Vidar Martinsen said:
Lets look at the known story of Alice and Bob outside a Black hole. Alice are falling inn to the hole, and Bob are outside.

What would Alice observe from the event horizon of a Black hole. Looking outward.
Alice would see Bob redshifted if Bob is stationary and presumably still but less redshifted if Bob is in free fall.
 
  • #8
Thanks for all your explanations.

I se that nobody has claimed my assumption to be false.
My point is :

If what I am claiming is true ( Allice experience time outside the black hole run at infinite speed).
She will never enter the black hole at all, and never cross the event horizon because the black hole will have disappeared and evaporated due to Hawking radiation long before she reaches inside.

Do anyone have any comments on that.
 
  • #9
Vidar Martinsen said:
( Allice experience time outside the black hole run at infinite speed).
She does not, as I mentioned in post 2 already. Unless she hovers above the event horizon with diverging thrust to weight ratios, which she cannot do for a long time.
 
  • #10
mfb said:
She does not, as I mentioned in post 2 already. Unless she hovers above the event horizon with diverging thrust to weight ratios, which she cannot do for a long time.

Ok , Thanks.
So what you say is if she somewhat manages to stay put for a short time at the event horizon due to a sort of infinite rocket power trust outward, she would experience time outside go at infinite speed.

Of course it is a theoretical situation, but I just wonder about the behavior of time and space on the outside as seen from the event horizon.
 
  • #11
Vidar Martinsen said:
Ok , Thanks.
So what you say is if she somewhat manages to stay put for a short time at the event horizon due to a sort of infinite rocket power trust outward, she would experience time outside go at infinite speed.

Of course it is a theoretical situation, but I just wonder about the behavior of time and space on the outside as seen from the event horizon.

No. What we are saying is that something that moves at c (light for instance) can "stay put" at the event horizon. But anything else cannot, not even for an instant.

The relative velocity between any material object whatsoever, and the event horizon, will be c, no matter how fast the object moves. This is because the speed of light is equal to "c" , for all observers, no matter how fast they are moving.

The FAQ "rest frame" of a photon spells this out in more detail. https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/rest-frame-of-a-photon.511170/

It's very short, so I'll quote the current version
've read that in relativity the concept of the rest frame of a photon doesn't make sense. Why is that?

A rest frame of some object is a reference frame in which the object's velocity is zero. One of the key axioms of special relativity is that light moves at c in all reference frames. The rest frame of a photon would require the photon to be at rest (velocity=0) and moving at c (velocity=299792458 m/s). That of course is contradictory. In other words, the concept doesn't make sense.

THe idea that "something with a point of view" can stay at rest at the event horizon is equivalent to the idea that "something can move at the speed of light". It's just not possible. Not even for an instant.

A corollary of this is that light does not have a point of view.

The point of view of an object falling through the event horizon is a concept that DOES makes sense, and we've attempted to answer that question.
 
  • #12
Vidar Martinsen said:
I se that nobody has claimed my assumption to be false.
My point is :

If what I am claiming is true ( Allice experience time outside the black hole run at infinite speed).
She will never enter the black hole at all, and never cross the event horizon because the black hole will have disappeared and evaporated due to Hawking radiation long before she reaches inside.
What you are claiming isn't true. Alice would experience the time outside at infinite speed only if she was hovering at the event horizon, which is not possible however as explained in post #3. Hovering a bit outside the event horizon she would perceive the time far outside running extremely fast while her wristwatch ticks just normal. In contrast, Bob hovering far outside would see Alice's wristwatch time running very slow compared to his clock in case she is hovering slightly outside the event horizon and would see it slowing down to zero in case she is falling freely. Google coordinate time (the time Bob experiences Alice's wristwatch which is far away) vs. proper time (the time Alice reads on her wristwatch).
So Alice will never enter the black hole from Bob's perspective, but will enter it in free fall from her own perspective. As mentioned being in free fall she will see things outside redshifted which means she will perceive clocks outside ticking slower than her wristwatch.
 
  • #13
Another question is of course:

How fast speed will you experience at the event horizon if you are falling in from a significant height?.

If it is close to light speed, you will of course experience a significant time dilation and length contraction looking outwards.
 
  • #14
Vidar Martinsen said:
Another question is of course:

How fast speed will you experience at the event horizon if you are falling in from a significant height?.

If it is close to light speed, you will of course experience a significant time dilation and length contraction looking outwards.

I was to fast here, and did not read your answer first. If I understand it correctly all matter will have the speed of light at the event horizon.

So the answer is. Since she has the speed of light, time will stand still and there will be a total length contraction looking outwards.

Ok thanks for your time and answers.
 
Last edited:
  • #15
Speed relative to what? You never experience any speed relative to you.
Vidar Martinsen said:
If I understand it correctly all matter will have the speed of light at the event horizon.
Relative to the horizon, in some coordinate systems.
Vidar Martinsen said:
Since she has the speed of light, time will stand still
That's not how it works.
Vidar Martinsen said:
If it is close to light speed, you will of course experience a significant time dilation and length contraction looking outwards.
You cannot apply special relativity here any more, you need general relativity. If you fall in freely, you don't notice anything special while crossing the event horizon.
 
  • #16
Vidar Martinsen said:
Ok , Thanks.
So what you say is if she somewhat manages to stay put for a short time at the event horizon due to a sort of infinite rocket power trust outward, she would experience time outside go at infinite speed.

Yeah, in that case all black holes above evaporate at infinite rate according to Alice. And the black hole below evaporates at the same rate as similar black holes very far above.

A micro black hole at same altitude with Alice evaporates at normal rate according to Alice, that black hole is the slowest evaporating black hole in the universe according to everyone.
 
Last edited:
  • #17
Here's a good way of looking at it. You have a spaceship with a flashbulb on the bow, and a person in the stern.

When the bow of the ship reaches the event horizon, the flash bulb goes off.

The person in the rear of the ship watches the bulb go off, and doesn't see anything unusual. They don't even know they've fallen though the event horizon, there's nothing special there to mark it. The flash from the bulb reaches them normally, they see it normally, and if they measure it's speed, they measure the speed of the flash as "c", the speed of light.

Additionally, the person on the ship computes the fact that the outward traveling light stays stationary with respect to the event horizon. So they conclude that measuring the speed of light is equivalent to measuring the speed at which the event horizon approaches them.

It's common to ask "at what speed does the ship approach the event horizon". This is unfortunately phrased, and the phrasing of the question leads to confusion. From the point of view of the ship, ship is not moving. What's moving from the point of view of the ship is the event horizon. And the event horizon is moving towards the ship at "c", the same speed as the flash of light is moving.

Now, consider what happens in Schwarzschild coordinates.

Some of the flash, that part of it that was headed directly outward, "stays put" at the event horizon. And the infalling observer catches up with it.

And that's all there is to it. As long as one avoids postulate things that don't exist (such as the point of view of light), things are simple. Postulating things that don't exist leads to confusion, such as trying to imagine light that stays still while at the same time also traveling constantly at "c".
 
  • Like
Likes mfb and Nugatory
  • #18
Thank you all again for giving me a greater understanding of these things :)
Regards
Vidar
 
  • #19
Vidar Martinsen said:
We know Bob who is outside, se Allices clock standing still

No, we don't. We know that Bob, who is outside, can't see Alice's clock at all if Alice is just at the event horizon. Light emitted outward at the horizon stays at the horizon.

Vidar Martinsen said:
Allices clock are not standing sill according to her, so would she se the clock outside running incredible fast. Actual infinite fast, if her clock was standing still.

No. Actually, if Bob is very far away from the hole and is at rest relative to it, Alice will see ingoing light from Bob redshifted by a factor of 2. One way to understand this heuristically is that there are two effects involved: Bob's light blueshifts as it falls towards the hole, but Alice is falling inward as well so there is a Doppler redshift when the light from Bob reaches her. If you work through the math, the redshift effect outweighs the blueshift effect for an overall redshift factor of 2, as above.

Note that this redshift factor is not necessarily the same as the rate Bob's clock runs relative to Alice's. The latter requires a definition of simultaneity, and if Alice is at or inside the horizon, there is no natural definition of simultaneity between her and Bob, so there is no natural way to define their relative clock rates.
 

Related to Looking out from a event horizon

What is an event horizon?

An event horizon is a theoretical boundary around a black hole, beyond which no light or matter can escape. It marks the point of no return for anything that enters the black hole.

What does it mean to "look out" from an event horizon?

Looking out from an event horizon refers to the perspective of an observer who is located at the event horizon and is observing the outside world. This is a hypothetical scenario since it is impossible for anything to survive at the event horizon.

What would happen if someone were to look out from an event horizon?

If someone were to hypothetically survive at the event horizon and look out, they would see a distorted and warped view of the outside world due to the extreme gravitational pull of the black hole. They would also experience time dilation, meaning time would appear to slow down for them compared to someone outside the event horizon.

Can anything escape from an event horizon?

No, once something crosses the event horizon, it is impossible for it to escape. This is due to the immense gravitational pull of the black hole, which is strong enough to trap even light.

What can we learn by looking out from an event horizon?

By studying the effects of the event horizon, we can better understand the nature of black holes and their impact on the surrounding space. It can also give us insights into the laws of physics in extreme environments.

Similar threads

  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
21
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
29
Views
445
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
2
Views
794
  • Special and General Relativity
2
Replies
39
Views
3K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
14
Views
2K
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
4
Views
785
  • Special and General Relativity
Replies
24
Views
2K
Back
Top