Nightshift, please explain,> 'the velocity created by that gravity...'.
Surely, the gravitational field is acting solely on the particles/waves which make up light in the first place.
By all accounts, the action of anything being caught & dragged into a black hole creates x-rays etc etc, but these apparently escape or are ejected thru the 'north & south poles', (weakest part), of the 'magnetic field'. These are much more energetic than light particles & as such are capable of 'escaping' or 'being squeezed out'. These are not able to be 'seen' by us directly, but we need detectors to do so.
As for 'seeing the light' inside a black hole, this goes against what is being told to us.
'If it were the same as the speed of light etc....', To my way of thinking, If it's 'standing still', how are we 'seeing it'? It's not travelling, so how is it getting to our eyes?
I just know that it's another interesting question. Something else to think about.
Goes back to the theory that as you approach the speed of light, your mass increases dramatically, & as such, the energy required to 'go faster' increases also. The end result being, that you will never be able to carry/generate, (at present), enough fuel/energy to exceed the 'speed of light'.
Thanks, you made me think again,(at 2.00 am & on my birthday).
Regards, L.
Quote/
Now here's the tricky bit, if nothing can travel faster than light, and black holes really exist, based on light not being able to escape the massive gravity, then wouldn't the velocity created by that gravity be faster than the speed of light? If it were the same as the speed of light then the light would stand still but we would still see it? /quote