wokeupatapicnic
wokeupatapicnic t1_j2brwdu wrote
Reply to comment by Xethinus in What is our current "best guess" about how to observers that entered a black hole on opposite sides would look to each other once they crossed the event horizon? by WittyUnwittingly
Pretty sure you just described the Firewall theory. I think Hawking proved that or at least was able to suggest that, this is not the case, but it’s worth looking into on your own if you’re interested!
wokeupatapicnic t1_j2br80d wrote
Reply to comment by Nerdcoreh in What is our current "best guess" about how to observers that entered a black hole on opposite sides would look to each other once they crossed the event horizon? by WittyUnwittingly
Mostly correct. You’d see the universe progressively move fast and faster towards infinite motion until the “light-death” of the universe. Again, that is provided you were able to perceive and maintain thought during the process. But yes, you would not feel like you were moving in slowmo or anything, but everything outside of the BH would begin happening faster and faster and faster as you blinked out of existence
wokeupatapicnic t1_j2bsr06 wrote
Reply to comment by The-Temple-Of-Iron in What is our current "best guess" about how to observers that entered a black hole on opposite sides would look to each other once they crossed the event horizon? by WittyUnwittingly
Absolute 0 is unreachable, in the sense that it breaks the laws of quantum physics. It violates the uncertainty principle.
I realize that black holes violate a lot of fundamental ideas in physics, but the general attempt is to find rational ways to rectify those violations, not simply accept them. Hawking’s work was based on solving many of those discrepancies.