Thanks, but I am still not satisfied.alter-ego wrote: ↑Thu Dec 09, 2021 5:47 amOnline discussions definitively say the regardless of relative velocity between two black holes, if their even horizons overlap at all, their fate is sealed in a merger.VictorBorun wrote: ↑Wed Dec 08, 2021 11:12 pmBut suppose the donor BH is yet not all in the center of its event horzon; suppose there are some ring singularity or more complex cluster of singular points, filaments and branes, and perhaps some matter is still swarming around that central region deep under the event horizonChris Peterson wrote: ↑Tue Dec 07, 2021 10:36 pm
How could it? The entire mass of a black hole is in a dimensionless point (or maybe a subatomic-sized volume) at the center. There is nothing going on between there and the event horizon. Two black holes should be able to pass each other with their event horizons overlapping and continue on unchanged. The event horizon isn't part of the structure of a black hole.
Black holes: Is merger inevitable when horizons touch?
If two black hole event horizons overlap (touch) can they ever separate again?
Maybe a way to think about this is once a bridge is formed between two separate event horizons, there is only one, contiguous event horizon, and since the relative BH velocity cannot reach the speed of light, neither BH can escape the common event horizon, however small the bridge is. I don't know, but superficially, breaking a closed-surface event horizon seems contrary to BH fundamentals.
Some commentors are vulgar and confuse a small mass object crossing a BH's event horizon with a more complex story of moving, growing (and receding?) event horizons.
Some commentors picture a BH as a simplistic non-rotating 1 point singularity with a spherical event horizon. But more realistic BHs should be quite complex under their event horizons; even a ring singularity is too perfect to be true.
Some commentors refer censorship conjectures that won't let us see a speckle of dust ever again once it goes under some BH's event horizon.
Now what of the binary BH pair before the merge, when the two horizons are reaching toward each other? Are not those horizons receding at other regions?