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| Tags: circular, parabolic, velocity |
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Old Physics wrote:
As I understand it, the circular orbital velocity at a given radius will be the escape velocity at twice that radius. That's valid in Newtonian mechanics for an orbit around a fixed pointlike mass. Newtonian mechanics is inadequate to describe black holes (and "fixed pointlike mass" is over-idealized...). How is it determined that the circular orbit for light is 1.5 times the radius of event horizen? By solving the geodesic equation of GR, and looking for circular null orbits. Note your statement applies ONLY to a Schwarzschild black hole, and "radius" is really the Schw. r coordinate, not really what the word normally means. If viewed from far away, would the light running in a circle around a BH appear to be slower than c? See my previous remarks about the ambiguities inherent in non-local observations like this. Tom Roberts |
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