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evo | 1 year ago

I suspect that would fall under the rule that if two black holes’ respective event horizons ever cross, they merge and initiate the eventual merger of the two respective black holes.

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sliken|1 year ago

I've seen this vaguely referenced, but when I dig in I don't find support for it.

It's far from obvious that just because the event horizons (which is just a mathematical concept and a 3D area of space) should control the trajectory of the singularity.

With two identical blackholes, with a event horizon of radius R, why should a singularity 2R away be unable to escape?