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Posted

Are there any empty vacuum space through which light can not travel in the Universe? Do we have any information about it? Are there any Dark Matter which has such property?

Posted

Not that we know of. Light doesn't interact with dark matter except gravitationally (which is why it is dark), so DM would not be opaque.

Posted

Are there any empty vacuum space through which light can not travel in the Universe? Do we have any information about it? Are there any Dark Matter which has such property?

 

Light has no problem traveling through a total vacuum.

Posted

Light has no problem traveling through a total vacuum.

 

How to make a total vacuum?

Do we make a vacuum space which has no Casimir effect?

Posted

How to make a total vacuum?

Do we make a vacuum space which has no Casimir effect?

 

If you could make a total vacuum, light would pass thru it. Why not?

Posted

How to make a total vacuum?

Do we make a vacuum space which has no Casimir effect?

 

I don't think that's what Airbrush was implying. There's more than one definition of vacuum, and "complete absence of anything" is only one of them and isn't physically attainable. Since we're talking about real effects, I assume that real vacuums — the absence of real, massive particles — are what are being referred to. Light would have no problem traveling through such a vacuum.

Posted

Let us think about Black Hole. Near Black Hole, Is it an empty space light can not travel?

----------Black Hole center ----------surface -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->radial direction

----------very high mass region(Black Hole) ------light can not travel region ---------light bending region ------------light no effect region

Posted

Let us think about Black Hole. Near Black Hole, Is it an empty space light can not travel?

----------Black Hole center ----------surface -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->radial direction

----------very high mass region(Black Hole) ------light can not travel region ---------light bending region ------------light no effect region

 

Could the only total vacuum in the universe exist inside a black hole, the region between the event horizon and the singularity?

Posted (edited)

Think about light bending and gravity.

Intensity of Gravity...0------low--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->high

Related phenomena..-----no affected ------small bended ---highly bended----critical bending --What happen?(light speed increase? critical bending? other phenomena?)---->

Edited by alpha2cen
Posted (edited)

What is happen at the very high Gravity region?

Total gravity = light attraction force + something???----> very highly empty state.

Edited by alpha2cen
Posted

There is no 'empty space'.

 

All of space is filled with aprox. 400 million photons in every cubic meter. Everywhere. It's the CMBR.

Posted (edited)

There is no 'empty space'.

 

It's the CMBR.

 

CMBR is a light long wave. It is one of radio micro waves.

Edited by alpha2cen
Posted

CMBR is a light long wave. It is one of radio waves.

 

CMBR is in the microwave range. It consists of photons.

Posted

According to Relativity theory

 

Black Hole center <----------------------------dragging-------------------------- electromagnetic wave(for example microwave)

*************************gravity force

Posted

Do not use this kind of sentence.

That's meaningless. ==> That is no meaning., I do not understand the meaning.

Try using words instead of lines and arrows. ==> How about using a detail sentence instead of using figure?

Posted
!

Moderator Note


alpha2cen,

For the purposes of discussion, you'll have to start being a bit more coherent. This thread will be closed if you can't start making sense and respond to people properly.

Posted

First of all, there is no such thing as an empty space. I don't even think an empty space exists inside a black hole...

 

What do you think will happen to atoms, or any kind of particles, inside a black hole? They instantly fall to the singularity and get shrunk to a point. I do believe that inside a black hole is totally void of matter, except the massive singularity. How could it be otherwise?

Posted

"They instantly fall to the singularity and get shrunk to a point."

No. They do not.

With a big enough black hole you could settle down and raise a family within the event horizon without knowing you were there.

Did it not occur to you that to fall instantly they would need to travel at infinite speed which implies breaking the light barrier?

Posted (edited)

You are correct for supermassive black holes that are feeding, but for any-sized mass black holes, which are not feeding, inside the event horzon is totally void of matter, except the singularity.

Edited by Airbrush
Posted (edited)

How can we recognize the Black Holes, which are not feeding, through the telescope in the space?

Edited by alpha2cen
Posted

You are correct for supermassive black holes that are feeding, but for any-sized mass black holes, which are not feeding, inside the event horzon is totally void of matter, except the singularity.

 

 

Do you have any kind of citation for this claim. Because, given that we don't know what the singularity acutally is, and we don't know the physics inside the event horizon, to make the claim that there is no matter inside the event horizon is a bit premature.

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