See above. Strike out the word coordinate. I don't think it's stopped because there's an infinity in the Schwarzschild metric. I think it's stopped because the speed of light is zero.
How do you know it's zero? Because of the infinity in the Schwarzchild metric.
In an infalling coordinate system, it never goes to zero.
It isn't an infinity, it's a zero, so it isn't a singularity in the usual sense of the word.
The speed of light is the reciprocal of that value.
I know why I can't travel at c. It's because of what
pair production tells us. We can quite literally make an electron out of light.
Yeah, no. That's not why. Even classically, you're prohibited from reaching c. You don't need to resort to quantum mechanics here.
That electron has spin angular momentum and magnetic dipole moment, and you can diffract it. It has a wave nature wherein 4π / c1½ applies. It's a spherical wave. You can't make it move linearly at c too. That's what underlies the Lorentz transform.
Yeah, sorry, but this is unadulterated nonsense. An electron is, in general, NOT a spherical wave. And historically, the Lorentz transforms precede quantum mechanics, so clearly the development of the Lorentz transforms cannot have had anything to do with spherical waves. And lastly, if you apply a Lorentz transform to a spherical wave, what do you get? Something that's
not spherical. So nothing in this claim makes any sense whatsoever. You've really gone off the deep end here.
But nevertheless there is a comparison, because we can say that you're travelling at very close to c through the universe. You might think everything is normal in your reference frame, but your thinking is slowed down so much that it hardly registers. A second to you is a thousand years to me
Because we're in different frames.
The infalling frame is different than the stationary frame. You're drawing your conclusions about the infalling frame from the stationary frame. Yet you don't even see how your own example invalidates that.
See above. I'm not treating one coordinate system as special.
You keep saying that, but it's still not true. You have treated the stationary frame as special, and ignored the difference between the stationary frame and the infalling frame.
No, it isn't. And I repeat: take a look at
this page from Misner/Thorne/Wheeler's Gravitation posted by a guy called Jesse. On the diagram on the left, the curve peaks to infinity at the event horizon.
Yeah, that's the
coordinate singularity of the Schwarzchild coordinates. And you want to treat that
coordinate singularity as special, because you want to treat the Schwarzchild metric as special. And you don't even understand that this is what you're doing.
That's the gravitational time dilation tending to infinity, and coordinate time tending to forever. At the top of the peak, is the end of time, so there is no top to it. But it's "transformed away" using Kruskal-Szekeres coordinates. A mathematical conjuring trick is employed to do a hop skip and a jump over the end of time, by pretending that a stopped observer sitting in front of a stopped clock sees it ticking merrily away.
And you've done it again: you have treated one coordinate system as special. You think that the Schwarzchild coordinates are the real ones, and we just get
to the Kruskal coordinates by using tricks. The problem, though, is that Kruskal coordinates can stand on their own as a direct solution to the GR field equations. And from that perspective, the change of coordinates
introduces a coordinate singularity that never previously existed when we transform to Schwarzchild coordinates from Kruskal coordinates.