The excerpt above is not the first time I have read about a human astronaut crossing the event horizon of a black hole. Others have written more or less the same.We can only look on helplessly as the heat engulfs you. Soon your precious body fluids will begin to boil and then vaporize. It will become so hot the veiy atoms of your being will be torn apart. But it is foretold that eventually you will be returned to us in a vaporous form of pure light and radiance.
But have no fear. You will pass to the other side safely and without pain. In your present form you will be lost to us forever, never to communicate again, at least not unless we make the crossing ourselves. But, my friend, from your place, you will have no trouble seeing us as we continue on without you. Good luck.
A story of martyrdom and resurrection? A man of the cloth comforting the martyr before the auto-da-fé? The crossing of the veil that separates the living from the dead? Not at all: it is the imaginary, but entirely possible, briefing of a future star traveler, curious and brave enough to enter a giant black hole and to cross its horizon. Not a briefing by a chaplain but by the starship’s resident theoretical physicist.
1) To my way of thinking, the astronaut would be dead long before the event horizon was crossed, the intense gravity playing havoc with the circulatory and respiratory systems and organ functions in general.
2) Another point I find difficult to accept is that once the astronaut crosses the event horizon, and persumably right up to the time the singularity itself is approached, the astronaut could still see on the other side of the event horizon. See what? Yes, light from the outside would continue to stream in, but like anything else (including the astronaut), it would be distorted and compacted and spaghettified such that any images would be unrecognizable.
If I am wrong about 1) and 2), why is the excerpt correct?