Black Holes are a Mathematical Fantasy, not a Physical Reality

Sandhu, Gurcharn S. (2019) Black Holes are a Mathematical Fantasy, not a Physical Reality. Applied Physics Research, 11 (4). p. 16. ISSN 1916-9639

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Abstract

With recent detection of black hole mergers by LIGO, the 'Black Holes' and 'Neutron Stars' have become common house-hold names, albeit fanciful names in public domain. However, for the scientific community black holes are the ultimate paradoxes of nature. The claimed observations of black hole mergers are in fact interpretations of certain observations under the spacetime model of Relativity. These interpretations can change significantly with the change in operating model of the phenomenon. A black hole is believed to be a ‘region of spacetime’ exhibiting such strong gravitational effects that nothing, not even light can escape from it. We demonstrate in this paper that this conviction is based on erroneous derivation for the gravitational redshift and the correct derivation shows that a photon cannot be prevented from escaping a gravitating body of any mass and size. Due to erroneous depiction of spacetime as a physical entity in GR, a mathematical singularity predicted by Schwarzschild metric solution of EFE has been projected as a physical possibility in the form of Black Holes. To strengthen the physical basis of Black Hole creation, the observations of Super Nova explosions are being interpreted under core collapse models. The core collapse models are now regarded as the physical foundation of Black Holes and Neutron stars. In this paper we have established the invalidity of current core collapse models on the grounds of treating electrons, ions and nuclei as non-interacting particles and using kinetic theory of gases for analyzing compressive stresses in solid iron core.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM One > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmone.org
Date Deposited: 19 Apr 2023 06:56
Last Modified: 20 Sep 2024 04:08
URI: http://publications.openuniversitystm.com/id/eprint/813

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