Wow. It's been more than a year since I last posted on this thread... and it surprises me that a lot of posts are extremely off-topic.
Okay, let's review:
1. This thread is about blackholes. Swarzchild blackholes, to be more specific, that is, an absolutely dense celestial body. Not rifts in space-time, wormholes, Einstein-Rosen bridges, portals, gateways to another dimensions or any of such stuff. Simply put, an amazingly small yet heavy object.
2. I am perfectly aware that nothing
is supposed to escape a black hole. I mean, holy $#!+ even d@mn light cannot escape, ya, ya, ya! And I ask, is that sufficient proof that there is no escaping a blackhole?
3. I am merely pondering that maybe, just maybe, there is a possibility that something that has entered a blackhole will be expelled from it, albeit torn and tattered into sub-atomic particles. I do not dispute that no object can escape a blackhole unmodified.
Now, some new insights.
I have a friend who once told me that it is impossible to actually reach (make contact with) a blackhole. While in the accretion disk, matter accelerates towards the center but never actually reaches it. The explanation is, supposedly, one of Einstein's equations regarding time dilation. The closer an object gets to the speed of light, the slower time goes for it. I gathered that he is of the opinion that the nearer an object is to a black hole, the faster it goes yet, as a side effect, the slower its descent. She also hypothesized that, when the object in question finally reaches the speed of light, it will stand stock-still, at least, relative to the blackhole.
I'm a bit sleepy now, though so I haven't put much thought into it. When I wake up tomorrow, I'll think about it some more and, hopefully, either understand or debunk my friend's theory.
Anyway, I still think it is possible for particles to escape a blackhole with the following assumptions:
1. It is a blackhole, not a gateway or rift or... y'know what, you should know what I mean by now
2. It is rotating about some axis
3. Its accretion disk is also rotating in the same direction around the same axis.
So... after a year and two months, what do you guys think?

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