aggle-rithm
Ardent Formulist
Nobody, including Phil Plait of Bad Astronomy, has been able to explain to me how they can ever form. My problem: as matter approaches the even horizon, where the escape velocity reaches the speed of light, from OUR point of view it falls at an asymptotically slower rate... in fact, from our point of view, nothing ever reaches it.
The perception of time between the observer and the observed depends not only on the relative speeds of the two, but on the Doppler distortion of the light bouncing back and forth between them. From the point of view of a person approaching an event horizon, light coming from behind him is extremely red-shifted by the increased gravity, while light coming from the edge of the event horizon to the outside universe would be extremely blue-shifted. The effect would be that time would appear to speed up for the observed (the one crossing the event horizon), and slow down for the observer.
In fact, in a very real sense, time IS slowing down and speeding up, since the frequency of the light waves serves as a clock that marks events in time.
AT the event horizon, the distortion becomes infinite, so of course time comes to a stop completely from the viewer's perspective.
To the more knowledgeable people than I in this group (and I know you're out there), feel free to correct me if I'm wrong on any of these points.
