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Axis of M87 Black Hole

questfortruth

Well-Known Member
Galaxy M87. The first photo of the Black Hole. In the photo, the jet is deflected from us by 17 degrees. But the real number is less. How much smaller can the number 17 be?
 

viole

Ontological Naturalist
Premium Member
Galaxy M87. The first photo of the Black Hole. In the photo, the jet is deflected from us by 17 degrees. But the real number is less. How much smaller can the number 17 be?
16.9999999…. maybe?

ciao

- viole
 

ChristineM

"Be strong", I whispered to my coffee.
Premium Member
Galaxy M87. The first photo of the Black Hole. In the photo, the jet is deflected from us by 17 degrees. But the real number is less. How much smaller can the number 17 be?

link please

But to your question, fractions of a degree are big numbers when talking universe
 

Ben Dhyan

Veteran Member
Is this paper saying that things can't disappear into a black hole?

American Physical Society
Description-
We study the formation of black holes by spherical domain wall collapse as seen by an asymptotic observer, using the functional Schrödinger formalism. To explore what signals such observers will see, we study radiation of a scalar quantum field in the collapsing domain wall background. The total energy flux radiated diverges when backreaction of the radiation on the collapsing wall is ignored, and the domain wall is seen by the asymptotic observer to evaporate by nonthermal “pre-Hawking radiation” during the collapse process. Evaporation by pre-Hawking radiation implies that an asymptotic observer can never lose objects down a black hole. Together with the nonthermal nature of the radiation, this may resolve the black hole information loss problem.

Observation of incipient black holes and the information loss problem
 
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