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Posted

Ok here is a weird thought experiment (or an extremely expensive real experiment!)

 

If you fired a set of small black holes towards a location such that at one point they from a thin spherical shell of black holes what happens to:

 

1. The space inside the shell? - it is completely isolated from the universe but is not within the event horizon of a black hole. Thus it could contain a recording device.*

 

2. When the shell is formed it is exactly the same as a larger 'solid' black hole when viewed from the outside so would it have gravity grater than the sum of the material making up the shell?

 

 

*I know the black holes would smash into a recording device but I think this could be avoided if the shell was a cube so the black holes don't continue towards the centre.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Ok here is a weird thought experiment (or an extremely expensive real experiment!)

 

If you fired a set of small black holes towards a location such that at one point they from a thin spherical shell of black holes what happens to:

 

1. The space inside the shell? - it is completely isolated from the universe but is not within the event horizon of a black hole. Thus it could contain a recording device.*

 

2. When the shell is formed it is exactly the same as a larger 'solid' black hole when viewed from the outside so would it have gravity grater than the sum of the material making up the shell?

 

 

*I know the black holes would smash into a recording device but I think this could be avoided if the shell was a cube so the black holes don't continue towards the centre.

Black holes (even small ones) are not like billiard balls. They can't form a shell of any kind. If there was a way to "fire" black holes towards one location, their mutual gravitation would cause them to coalesce into one (bigger) black hole.

 

Chris

Posted

Ok here is a weird thought experiment (or an extremely expensive real experiment!)

 

If you fired a set of small black holes towards a location such that at one point they from a thin spherical shell of black holes what happens to:

 

1. The space inside the shell? - it is completely isolated from the universe but is not within the event horizon of a black hole. Thus it could contain a recording device.*

 

2. When the shell is formed it is exactly the same as a larger 'solid' black hole when viewed from the outside so would it have gravity grater than the sum of the material making up the shell?

 

 

*I know the black holes would smash into a recording device but I think this could be avoided if the shell was a cube so the black holes don't continue towards the centre.

 

Black holes are zero dimensional by nature. When two black holes collide, they merge and the event horizon expands. The volume of the singularity remains constant.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Black holes are zero dimensional by nature. When two black holes collide, they merge and the event horizon expands. The volume of the singularity remains constant.

 

Thanks, I should have perhaps been more accurate - I was talking about a shell of event horizons with the singularities not touching each other. Presumably, the outside universe would see just a big event horizon?

 

How would this Physics work do you think? From the inside of the shell there is complete disconnection from the universe. From the outside of the shell it appears that lots of new matter has arrived from nowhere. I Know it is unstable but think about the instant when it is still a shell.

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