by Chris Peterson » Fri May 22, 2015 3:17 pm
Chardonay wrote:Chris Peterson wrote:Chardonay wrote:Even two of the so called Black Holes merging will be done in such slow real time that they will be transformed, not destroyed.
Black holes simply merge. They certainly aren't destroyed, and "transformed" doesn't describe the result except in the most trivial sense. Binary black holes dance around each other for millions of years, without much effect (except possibly a periodic light signature from their accretions discs). The final collision and merger, however, is very fast- nearly instantaneous.
Chris what is trivial about: Full Definition of TRANSFORM
A black hole is defined by its mass, electric charge, and angular momentum. After a merger, the resultant black hole has a new mass, charge, and momentum which are determined by those properties in the progenitors. By "trivial" transformation I mean that there's a simple change, but no change in quality or form. The final black hole is just a black hole with the mass, charge, and momentum of the original pair.
And I definitely and totally disagree with your "The final collision and merger, however, is very fast - nearly instantaneous." You are still thinking in slow earth time.
I'm not sure what you mean. A merger is something that happens in a fraction of a second.
[quote="Chardonay"][quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="Chardonay"]Even two of the so called Black Holes merging will be done in such slow real time that they will be transformed, not destroyed.[/quote]
Black holes simply merge. They certainly aren't destroyed, and "transformed" doesn't describe the result except in the most trivial sense. Binary black holes dance around each other for millions of years, without much effect (except possibly a periodic light signature from their accretions discs). The final collision and merger, however, is very fast- nearly instantaneous.[/quote]
Chris what is trivial about: Full Definition of TRANSFORM[/quote]
A black hole is defined by its mass, electric charge, and angular momentum. After a merger, the resultant black hole has a new mass, charge, and momentum which are determined by those properties in the progenitors. By "trivial" transformation I mean that there's a simple change, but no change in quality or form. The final black hole is just a black hole with the mass, charge, and momentum of the original pair.
[quote]And I definitely and totally disagree with your "The final collision and merger, however, is very fast - nearly instantaneous." You are still thinking in slow earth time.[/quote]
I'm not sure what you mean. A merger is something that happens in a fraction of a second.