On Friday, July 17, 2020 at 5:01:41 AM UTC-5 [email protected] wrote:

>
>
> On Thursday, July 16, 2020 at 7:50:07 PM UTC-6, Alan Grayson wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thursday, July 16, 2020 at 5:08:57 PM UTC-6, Lawrence Crowell wrote:
>>>
>>> Gravitons do not escape from a BH, any more than can light. However, 
>>> from the perspective of an outside observer all matter than went into a BH 
>>> is on the surface above the event horizon, called the stretched horizon. 
>>>
>>> LC
>>>
>>
>> Gravitons might not exist (and hence quantum gravity can't exist)  But 
>> whatever the case, how can BH's interact gravitationally with objects 
>> beyond its event horizon? You say this doesn't happen. I don't understand 
>> your argument. AG 
>>
>
That you are saying this illustrates you do not understand general 
relativity.
 

>
> I may have identified the thousand pound gorilla in the room; the 
> hypothetical force carrying particle of the quantum gravitating field, the 
> graviton, which for BH's doesn't exert any force! AG 
>

I have no idea why you are saying this. Gravitation is not a force in the 
usual sense and so the graviton does not produce a force in the standard 
meaning. For the weak field limit the nonlinear terms are negligable and a 
gravitational wave is linear. This is easily quantized. In fact it is 
similar to the Hanbury-Brown and Twiss theory of the diphoton. It is when 
the field becomes strong that general relativity becomes nonlinear and runs 
into trouble with quantum mechanics.

LC

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