by dogel » Wed Apr 12, 2006 8:20 pm
I have a question but I have to set it up so bare with me.
The gravitational force from the two black holes as felt by an observer directly above or below the center of mass with respect to the plane of rotation (as to eliminate any change in the force from when the two are aligned or when one is closer than the other if they have different masses) would be F = Gm(M1+M2)/(r^2). M1 and M2 are the masses of the black holes, m is the mass of the observer, r is the distance from the observer to the gravitational center of the two black holes, and G is the gravitational constant.
Now, my question is would the force from the super-supermassive black hole be bigger, smaller, or equal to F. In other words, is there some chance that gravity (or mass) is somehow lost or gained during the process. I'm just talking about the black holes themselves and not any surrounding gases that will get sucked in and contribute to the mass.
I have a question but I have to set it up so bare with me.
The gravitational force from the two black holes as felt by an observer directly above or below the center of mass with respect to the plane of rotation (as to eliminate any change in the force from when the two are aligned or when one is closer than the other if they have different masses) would be F = Gm(M1+M2)/(r^2). M1 and M2 are the masses of the black holes, m is the mass of the observer, r is the distance from the observer to the gravitational center of the two black holes, and G is the gravitational constant.
Now, my question is would the force from the super-supermassive black hole be bigger, smaller, or equal to F. In other words, is there some chance that gravity (or mass) is somehow lost or gained during the process. I'm just talking about the black holes themselves and not any surrounding gases that will get sucked in and contribute to the mass.