Dave, I think you have it pretty much correct but like you don't know if it has 
ever been proven other than as an extension to the small proven dilations 
accumulated by satellites. I would also agree that distance is modified but 
this again is due to dilation and would  only be from our perspective due to 
Lorentzian contraction of the spaceship as it approaches the horizon. It should 
be a straightforward Pythagorean relationship between space and time where one 
can not deviate without the other V^2/C^2.  I posit the hydrogen in a Casimir 
cavity reflects the same relationship between itself and our macro world here 
on earth as we perceive between ourselves and the spaceship nearing the 
horizon. This is what Jan Naudts was saying in his 2005 paper suggesting the 
Mills hydrino was relativistic hydrogen.. not in the sense Mills used regarding 
hydrogen being ejected by the suns corona which is still the typical Lorentzian 
contraction of an object approaching C or the gravitational equivalent of an 
event horizon but rather the differential of an object  experiencing a 
gravitational hill/deficit relative to the macro world where from it's 
perspective as "normal" we in the macro world appear to be the dilated objects 
slowing down to a near stop. I propose that changes in the "height" of a 
gravity hill are the basis for catalytic action like we see in skeletal cats 
and nano powders such that it is the geometry of the conductive metal that 
establishes the environment in opposition to stiction... the hydrogen, like the 
spaceship approaching the environment is merely reacting to the already 
established environment.... This may be the power source behind all the 
anomalous claims on Ni-H in contradiction to COE because COE falsely assumes 
that a HUP trap [maxwellian demon is impossible] - it may be impossible to 
fabricate but if nature can be induced to naturally assemble I believe you can 
create heat by putting forces like Casimir  stiction into opposition with 
random gas motion.... It just takes a very craftily set stage to avoid self 
destruction o the props.
Regards
Fran

From: ChemE Stewart [mailto:cheme...@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 27, 2012 12:38 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [Vo]:[OT]:Question About Event Horizon

Dave,

I believe the mass of the ship is converted to energy (thru radiation) as it 
approaches which is then converted to entropy and increases the surface of the 
hole.  The "information" becomes completely scattered by the time it reaches 
the surface.  Until you reach the surface, the black hole is doing "work" on 
you we call "gravity", which is an entropic force.

Stewart
Darkmattersalot.com

On Thursday, December 27, 2012, David Roberson wrote:
OK, I guess that I am modifying my beliefs as we consider the implications of 
this system.  I think you are correct in the assumption that the mass of the 
ship does not reach infinity at the horizon.  If we assume that no energy is 
created out of thin air then the mass of the ship must increase significantly 
as it reaches the boundary.  This must be true since the velocity of the ship 
becomes zero at that point and all of the gravitational energy due to the 
initial location of the ship at the beginning point of its journey must be 
converted into mass.  This could be calculated, and it definitely is not 
infinity but is substantially greater than when at rest in our vicinity.

Again, you need to think about each observer and what they perceive.  We need 
to have our laws of physics to be in effect during our observations and the 
other guys need the same.  So far, the only way that this seems likely is for 
time dilation to work overtime.  I suspect that the red shift is a stand in for 
time dilation on board the ship, but I do not recall seeing that proven.  If it 
is true, then we have an easy technique to employ.

I now tend to think that the space guy can impact with the black hole, but that 
it will take forever for this to happen from our perspective.  If he had a jar 
full of muons, they would never decay as far as we could tell while he is near 
that boundary.  Too bad for him, but the muons would not be able to save him 
from extinction in a very short time period.  Then again, he might live for 
essentially ever from our point of view which is an extension to his normal 
life span in our environment.  My father used to tell us kids that time passes 
faster and faster as you get older.  Now I understand what he meant.

The curvature of space might somehow enter into this discussion but I am not 
sure how to think of its effect.  I am confident that time dilation is a 
factor, but perhaps the distances are modified as well.  That is an area to 
consider.

You know what I think of sources that say that things are meaningless don't 
you?  That translates into I do not know and please do not ask me again.

It is late and my mind is becoming mush.

Dave

-----Original Message-----
From: Abd ul-Rahman Lomax 
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To: vortex-l 
<vortex-l@eskimo.com<javascript:_e(%7b%7d,%20'cvml',%20'vortex-l@eskimo.com');>>;
 vortex-l 
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Sent: Thu, Dec 27, 2012 12:09 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:[OT]:Question About Event Horizon

At 10:23 PM 12/26/2012, David Roberson wrote:

>We both agree that nothing will happen to the ship itself unless

>tidal forces tear it apart.  That has not been an issue and I am not

>sure of why you start with the assumption that I think it will.  You

>must have misunderstood my statement.  I suppose I could have made

>it in a clearer manner.



I never objected to the thought experiment, nor thought that this

would be an issue. We can imagine a teeny-tiny spaceship that is

super strong. and we can imagine a really big black hole, so that the

curvature doesn't bite us.



>The ship itself will never think it reaches the ultimate boundary

>but we will see radiation emitted by it become red shifted until no

>more detectable energy comes our way from it.



I'm no longer confident of any of the explanations. The holonauts

never see the singularity, but if they are travelling toward it, in

their own time, they see an event horizon ahead of them, becoming

smaller more and more intense, I'd think. However, lots of sources

say that events beyond the event horizon are meaningless.



Part of what is frying my brain here is the gravitational field at

the event horizon. The event horizon is defined as the boundary where

gravity is so intense that light cannot take a path that increases

its distance from the center of gravity. That's geometrical. If the

holonauts pass the originally observed event horizon, and see a

receded event horizon in front of them, how would the light paths

have shifted? It doesn't seem that time dilation would do this.



The sense I keep coming up with is that the event horizon is the

place beyond which light cannot escape to the *external universe*,

which means infinite distance, I found one article that refers to

this. Not that it cannot escape to some greater distance.



But that contradicts the "gravity so intense" statements, and the

light path statements.



I need to examine doppler shift from gravity more closely. I clearly

don't understand the extreme case, where light not only can't escape

to infinity (equivalent to escape velocity), but it can't go up *at

all*. That means that the shift takes place immediately on emission,

not upon rise through a gravitational field.



>That is what I refer to as blink out of existence, not actually be

>destroyed.  This process with take an infinite amount of time to

>complete so I guess theoretically it is always detectable until the

>noise hides what is left of the low frequency energy.



Where do you get the "infinite amount of time" from? It seems you are

claiming that *our time* slows down.



>The mass of the ship will appear to become infinite to us as it

>fades into the noise and the spaceman will appear to freeze in place

>due to time dilation.  From our perspective, the ship becomes frozen

>at what we believe is the event horizon, although the other closer

>observers will not agree with our location determination.



I don't think so. The mass of the ship is incorporated into the mass

of the black hole, and that's not infinite. The information coming to

us from the ship, as I mention, would be doppler-shifted, but the

velocity of the ship would be increasing, acceleration due to

gravity. How would we know where the ship is? I mentioned how: I

assume we know the gravitational field, and the ship is sending us

photons. If they are gammas, they'll last longer! From the doppler

shift in them we will know where they are in the field. (They will

not be travelling at relativistic velocities.) As they approach the

event horizon, the signal will be increasingly red-shifted, and it

will end when they cross the event horizon. The photons still travel

at the speed of light. They are not slowed, they are doppler-shifted.



>Once before a long time ago you strongly disagreed with the idea of

>time dilation for a traveler as he enters a black hole.  I suspect

>that you now realize that this must occur.



Sure. I don't recall disagreeing with it, however. Just to be sure we

are on the same page, the traveller does not experience time

dilation. We observe it when we observe a traveller clock. Time

dilation does *not* mean that the traveller appears to slow down.



>Yes, I see that now you understand that the spaceman nearing what we

>considered the event horizon sees to the other side.



I understand what you *mean* but I'm not relating this to the

traveller nearing the event horizon. They don't see beyond *their*

event horizon, that's clear. The question I'm getting is how the

event horizon is located. Does the curvature of space depend on where we are?



There is something we are not considering here.



>He can continue to communicate with the first guy that started ahead

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