Quote:
Originally Posted by sjastro
Correct.
Due to the conservation of mass and energy, when matter falls into a BH it isn't destroyed. We may not know what form the matter takes except it becomes part of the BH mass.
Regards
Steven
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If the Black Hole's mass can be predicted, then the gravitational field can also be known. If the Field is known, then the Tidal Forces should be able to be approximated.
For any given Black Hole, I'm sure that there would be an estimate of whether its Tidal Forces were sufficiently strong enough to overcome the Weak Nuclear Force, perhaps even the Strong Nuclear Force. Also, whether the rapid convergence of matter, and subsequent collisions attributed to the convergence, could/would trigger a nuclear fission/fusion processes?
Is there perhaps several different type of radii; one which triggers fusion events, one which triggers fission, and ultimately one in which the Tidal Forces overcomes the different atomic forces...couldn't Black Holes have different types of event layers?