Brent,

That's just your interpretation and you apparently ARE UNABLE to find any 
authoritative sites to confirm it. Yes, of course the mass interior to a BH 
collapses into the singularity but that doesn't mean it vanishes from the 
black hole.

Looking at Carroll's Wiki Bio it seems that a lot of his theories are 
highly speculative and unconfirmed...

Here, on the other hand, is a quote from Kip Thorne's 'Black Holes and Time 
Warps' which says otherwise:

"The hole must be born when a star implodes upon itself; THE HOLE'S MASS, 
AT BIRTH MUST BE THE SAME AS THE STAR'S; AND EACH TIME SOMETHING FALLS INTO 
THE HOLE, ITS MASS MUST GROW"

So again your theory is a highly speculative INTERPRETATION of the 
equations you mention which so far as you can demonstrate is NOT a 
mainstream scientific understanding of BH's.

So who's hopeless now? (I wouldn't have added this barb if you hadn't BTW)

Edgar



On Tuesday, January 28, 2014 7:20:25 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote:
>
> On 1/28/2014 3:36 PM, Edgar L. Owen wrote:
>  
> Brent, 
>
>  I did read the Wikipedia page, and frankly I don't buy your 
> interpretation that proves 1. and 2. below though I'm trying to keep an 
> open mind.
>  
>
> It proves that no mass is *needed* inside a BH, that the gravity alone, in 
> the absence of matter (you know what "vacuum" means?), forms a BH.  If you 
> added matter to the Schwarzschild solution it would quickly disappear into 
> the singularity with a corresponding increase in the size of the BH.
>
>  
>  And I'm not going to go by what 1 person, who I don't even know and who 
> is presumably your friend says via an email.
>  
>
> So you don't know who Sean Carroll is and you didn't even bother to look 
> him up!?  
>
> I'm afraid you're hopeless Edgar.
>
> Brent
>
>  Again I challenge you to provide me some authoritative online sources 
> who agree with you that
>  1. Matter (mass) vanishes inside a black hole
> 2. The intense gravitation of a black hole is not due to any mass inside 
> of it but to the trail of space curvature left behind outside the event 
> horizon by the matter entering the black hole.
>
>  I haven't found a single source that claims that but I'm open to 
> correction if you can provide some authoritative ones.....
>
>  And I disagree with your interpretation of the Schwartzchild solution 
> which clearly is based on the ACTUAL mass of a BH. So far as I know all, or 
> at least most physicists, agree with me that it is the mass INSIDE the 
> black hole that produces the event horizon.
>
>  Again, authoritative sources to support your 1. and 2. above? Can you 
> produce any? If not I find your explanation unsupported..
>
>  Edgar
>
>  
> On Tuesday, January 28, 2014 5:19:27 PM UTC-5, Brent wrote: 
>
> On 1/28/2014 12:45 PM, Edgar L. Owen wrote: 
> > Brent, 
> > 
> > Perhaps I'm missing something but I read the Wikipedia article and 
> several others (eg. 
> > http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/schwp.html) and reread Chapter 13: 
> Inside Black Holes of 
> > 'Black Holes and Time Warps' by Kip Thorne and NONE of those sources say 
> what you are 
> > saying, namely that 
> > 
> > 1. Matter (mass) vanishes inside a black hole 
> > 2. The intense gravitation of a black hole is not due to any mass inside 
> of it but to 
> > the trail of space curvature left behind outside the event horizon by 
> the matter 
> > entering the black hole. 
> > 
> > I haven't found a single source that claims that but I'm open to 
> correction if you can 
> > provide an authoritative one..... 
>
> You didn't read the Wikipedia page I referenced, which showed that the 
> Schwarzschild BH 
> solution is found by assuming a vacuum, T_u_v=0? 
>
> > 
> > In fact the Schwarzchild solution specifically HAS a mass term in it on 
> the basis of 
> > which the radius of the event horizon is calculated. So my reading of 
> the Schwarzchild 
> > solution is that it specifically ASSUMES that the black hole is created 
> by the mass 
> > INSIDE IT. 
>
> But that's the "equivalent" mass that would be necessary to produce the 
> same field outside 
> the event horizon.  As I said, the BH is massive in that it warps space, 
> but it doesn't 
> follow that it has matter inside the event horizon which is trying to 
> "send out gravity". 
>
> > 
> > So are 1. and 2. above YOUR own interpretation of what's inside a black 
> hole or do you 
> > have some authoritative source(S) that actually states that in plain 
> English you can 
> > provide? 
> > 
> > Now I certainly don't automatically discount the possibility that the 
> matter inside a 
> > black hole leaves through the singularity and pops up somewhere else, 
>
> I doesn't pop up somewhere else.  Remember mass and energy are the same 
> thing in GR.  One 
> way to look at it is to say the mass in converted to gravitational energy, 
> i.e. is takes a 
> lot of energy/mass to warp space up into a singularity.  Gravity in GR is 
> non-linear so it 
> "pulls on itself", that's why it makes a singularity (classically). 
>  Hawking the radiation 
> is the conversion of this mass/energy back into particles. 
>
> > but there is no convincing argument that that must be true. And if so 
> you must come up 
> > with a VERY convincing argument that explains why a BH still appears to 
> contain all the 
> > mass producing its gravitational field even though that mass isn't 
> actually there anymore. 
> > 
> > Just referencing an equation that doesn't have a mass term does none of 
> the above. 
>
> No, but it shows that a BH doesn't have to be created from matter, and in 
> fact there is 
> speculation that black holes might have been created in big bang just from 
> fluctuations in 
> the metric.  Of course we suppose that BH like the one at the center of 
> the Milky Way were 
> created, or at least grew large, by matter falling in. 
>
> > 
> > Again is this your personal interpretation or can you give me an actual 
> authoritative 
> > reference that states your 1. and 2.? 
>
> No, it's common knowledge.   Here's Sean Carroll's email, 
> seanc...@gmail.com; ask him. 
>
> > 
> > BTW where are you employed as a physicist? In academia or the corporate 
> world? 
>
> I'm retired.  I worked for the U.S. Navy. 
>
> Brent 
>
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