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Proof against black-holes

shunyadragon

shunyadragon
Premium Member
A quick article to read:

Proof Against Black-holes

(it has a pretty picture too)

Pretty pictures, quickie articles, and anecdotal hypothetical arguments of 'proof' offer nothing, and, of course, nothing is nor can be proven in science.

The existence black holes have been identified and their nature falsified by scientific methods. To find the hypothesis of the existence, you would have provide a valid explanation of the evidence for what we directly observe as black holes like the one at the center of our galaxy. If it is not a black hole what is it?
 

Nyingjé Tso

Tänpa Yungdrung zhab pä tän gyur jig
Vanakkam,

So, are you juste gonna post proof threads with links to your website without discussion or anything ?

Cause it can seems that you are just advertising.

Aum Namah Shivaya
 

Kapalika

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
Last I checked, we have some direct evidence of black holes and a lot of indirect evidence that is almost direct to the point of it might as well being direct.

The reasoning in that article is flawed. In the relativistic model the warping of spacetime isn't like particles. Light is a particle. I'm not sure on the specifics of gravity waves, but it's worth pointing out that only the spacetime right on and past the event horizion is not able to escape. So light and gravity can travel away even just a hair outside of that. The light is severely redshifted of course. There is actually a phenomenon known as Hawking radiation where there is a slight halo of a glow just outside the event horizion due to this boundary area (where the light comes from is a matter takes some understanding/explaining of quantum mechanics that I don't feel like explaining atm but it involves matter and anti matter pairs).

If I understand correctly all gravity waves travel at the speed of light, and probably have the same property of having that fixed speed and so probably have some kind of equivalent to a redshift. So, so long as it's not past the event horizon it can propagate out.

It's been a while since I've brushed up on the subject, but anyone who's actually taken a casual interest a little further than just dabbling in reading about astronomy and blackholes should be able to understand on at least some level that this article is wrong in it's reasoning. People who study this kind of thing for their entire lives would of thought of such a basic refutation if it were true. Scientists are always trying to outdo each other... if someone could so easily disprove blackholes it would shake the scientific community and make them very famous and influential. Making a groundbreaking discovery like that is what every scientist dreams of. Of course, by this point there is too much evidence to refute that they exist, so any such discovery would most likely be that in some fundamental way we misunderstood black holes.
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.
Last I checked, we have some direct evidence of black holes and a lot of indirect evidence that is almost direct to the point of it might as well being direct.

The reasoning in that article is flawed. In the relativistic model the warping of spacetime isn't like particles. Light is a particle. I'm not sure on the specifics of gravity waves, but it's worth pointing out that only the spacetime right on and past the event horizion is not able to escape. So light and gravity can travel away even just a hair outside of that. The light is severely redshifted of course. There is actually a phenomenon known as Hawking radiation where there is a slight halo of a glow just outside the event horizion due to this boundary area (where the light comes from is a matter takes some understanding/explaining of quantum mechanics that I don't feel like explaining atm but it involves matter and anti matter pairs).

If I understand correctly all gravity waves travel at the speed of light, and probably have the same property of having that fixed speed and so probably have some kind of equivalent to a redshift. So, so long as it's not past the event horizon it can propagate out.

It's been a while since I've brushed up on the subject, but anyone who's actually taken a casual interest a little further than just dabbling in reading about astronomy and blackholes should be able to understand on at least some level that this article is wrong in it's reasoning. People who study this kind of thing for their entire lives would of thought of such a basic refutation if it were true. Scientists are always trying to outdo each other... if someone could so easily disprove blackholes it would shake the scientific community and make them very famous and influential. Making a groundbreaking discovery like that is what every scientist dreams of. Of course, by this point there is too much evidence to refute that they exist, so any such discovery would most likely be that in some fundamental way we misunderstood black holes.
Speed of gravity is 2.55 × 10^8 and 3.81 × 10^8 meters-per-second,
 

Twilight Hue

Twilight, not bright nor dark, good nor bad.

Jonathan Ainsley Bain

Logical Positivist
Pretty pictures, quickie articles, and anecdotal hypothetical arguments of 'proof' offer nothing, and, of course, nothing is nor can be proven in science.

The existence black holes have been identified and their nature falsified by scientific methods. To find the hypothesis of the existence, you would have provide a valid explanation of the evidence for what we directly observe as black holes like the one at the center of our galaxy. If it is not a black hole what is it?

If there was a single object at the center of the galaxy, then the notorious 'problem of rotation curves of galaxies'
would not actually be a problem. AKA Rubin's problem is solved by realizing that spiral galaxies are binary
systems with two super-massive objects emitting stars - that is why there are typically two arms to such galaxies.

Because they emit stars (mass) they can only be called 'white-holes' (apologies if that term is used elsewhere).

The following graph was generated in computer algorithm, and it clearly shows the gravitational structure
of a spiral galaxy by the emission of stars from each of the pair.

rotation-curves%20summary.gif


More of this is explored at this link:

Summary of Rotation Curves of Galaxies

You may also want to google "Rubin's problem" if you are unfamiliar with it.
 

Jonathan Ainsley Bain

Logical Positivist
If I understand correctly all gravity waves travel at the speed of light, and probably have the same property of having that fixed speed and so probably have some kind of equivalent to a redshift. So, so long as it's not past the event horizon it can propagate out.

So what you are saying is that the mass beneath the event-horizon is not actually beneath the event horizon.
 
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