Mel Odious
NWO Public Relations Dept.
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2007
- Messages
- 587
I'm currently teaching myself basic physics, and a strange thought occured to me while I was casually looking ahead in my textbook this afternoon.
Please forgive me if what follows is a bit simplistic. I haven't studied the chapters on light yet! Okay, here goes ...
If light passes by at a sufficiently large distance from a black hole, it will be bent by the black hole's gravity and then continue off into space.
But if the light passes too close to the black hole, it will be pulled into the black hole.
Therefore, It seemed to me that there should be a distance at which light will neither be pulled into the black hole nor pass by after being bent by the black hole's gravity. In other words, the light should "orbit" the black hole for some arbitrary length of time. Or at least, there should be photons of light in orbit around the black hole. Is that better?
I don't know if I've reasoned this out correctly or not, but the idea fascinates me. Am I correct in my thinking?
Please forgive me if what follows is a bit simplistic. I haven't studied the chapters on light yet! Okay, here goes ...
If light passes by at a sufficiently large distance from a black hole, it will be bent by the black hole's gravity and then continue off into space.
But if the light passes too close to the black hole, it will be pulled into the black hole.
Therefore, It seemed to me that there should be a distance at which light will neither be pulled into the black hole nor pass by after being bent by the black hole's gravity. In other words, the light should "orbit" the black hole for some arbitrary length of time. Or at least, there should be photons of light in orbit around the black hole. Is that better?
I don't know if I've reasoned this out correctly or not, but the idea fascinates me. Am I correct in my thinking?

