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Posted

this scenario describes the final collapse of a star to a black hole, and also will ask some questions that i hope you can help me with. heres the short version: gravity wave triggers spatial contraction to singularity, a 2-dimensional object

Posted

After core fusion reaches iron, it’s the mass of the outer layers of the star imploding at about a quarter of the speed of light that causes the “spatial contraction” and the singularity may be a point.

Posted

admitedly this is non-conventional view, however, in four-dimensional space-time the singularity is only reduced by the dimensions of length and time, leaving two dimensions, the y and z axis. in this model, the spatial contraction converts all the infalling mass to energy, energy densities that aquire gravitational properties (fifth state of matter?) squishes the high-energy wavelengths together to the point where the representative sine-waves (time=0) approach the vertical and absorb the energy into bonds with each other resulting in a 2-dimension so-called singularity, full of enegy in the bond but frozen in the singularity.

Posted

Well one conventional view is that the spinning star collapses first into a sort of torus and then the torus further pancakes down to a spinning Kerr ring singularity (KRS). So the “z” or height axis ”is reduced” as anything perpendicular to the plane of the KRS is crushed flat by gravity. Also, I believe that time becomes a spatial dimension inside the Event Horizon and isn’t “reduced”.

Posted (edited)

yes, it can be shown as a singularity. even in my model there would be some x component as it gets stacked up, leading to a thin 3 rd dimension.

inside the event horizon but outside the singularity? as to time component, time becomes space? very interesting can you explain that a bit more

Edited by stevebtaylor
clearing a thot
Posted

thanks for the tutorial.

the triple point of light describes a singularity that is a stable form of energy.

it has reached the saturation point of light.

is this correct? > the spacial contraction event occurs at relativistic speed.

all matter is converted to energy, the wave lengths are shifted to high energy.

 

now, here i propose that the sine-waves of the energies are almost vertical and then, at spacial contraction, are pushed together where the energy is absorbed into forming bonds between the e-m fields. the energy goes into binding the fields together. now being vertical one spatial direction is lost as well as the time component, a local event.

this is what the singularity should be composed of, bound energy with gravitational properties. would this be considered a form of matter?

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

the triple-point of light is the supposed state of a singularity.

 

a collapsing stars' mass is converted to energy by a relativistic event and results in a blackhole. the spatial contraction has bound the energy waves together by re-arranging the em fields. this is basically the starting point of the triple point of light, where the fields of the sinewaves of light are horizontal for both planes of the em waves, and so in absorbing an amount of energy via amplitude amplification, the fields hold the waves frozen in place.

this requires only that the weak fields of individual waves relax under pressure and extend across the new object with a strong field, a blackhole singularity.

 

now, my question is this. do those fields exist around each sinewave (electro=y, magnetic=z, time =x) that describes a photon in motion?


Merged post follows:

Consecutive posts merged

is that a clear question? ive benn surfing and can find nothing on this.

Edited by stevebtaylor
sp.
Posted

the original purpose of this proposal was to outline the basic layout of blackhole formation and then attempt to fill in the pieces.

 

the basic layout for blackhole formation is;

 

chaotic collapse of stellar mass begins the process.

spatial contraction is the end state.

in between, mass is converted to energy. the analogy is to a nuclear explosion where an implosion is used to detonate an explosion. for a blackhole to form, this explosion is further imploded.

 

this seems to be the basic outline for blackhole formation.

 

my question to you: is the 3-step ouline for a blackhole valid?

Posted

to clarify, the triple-point of light refers to the state inside a blackhole.

the mass of a collapsing star has been converted to energy and that energy has been spatially contracted in the dimension of travel.

so what is holding it there?

the light, read energy, has absorbed an incredible amount of energy and also been compressed. it should explode.

so, does the energy of spatial contraction exceed this value?

we dont know because spatial contraction does not have an energy formula.

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