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!SKYRIMvIaU 01/24/12(Tue)21:42 No.33604079>>33603942 >The amount of mass inside a black hole is finite.
According to Einstein's theory of relativity, as objects near the speed of light, and, again, stop me if I'm wrong, they gain more mass. Because energy is equal to mass, times the speed of light in a vacuum, squared. So as that object nears the speed of light, it becomes more massive, which slows it down. But the draw and pull of the gravity of a blackhole pulls it faster, speeding it up again, causing it to loop in this sort of mass gaining, speed gaining never ending, but never quite light speed approaching cycle...
What I'm getting at is...as the object approaches the epicenter of the blackhole, it becomes -incredibly- massive. Far more so than it was before it was in the first place, thus, increasing its own gravitational pull...am I wrong? |