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Reverting recent edits that claim that gravitational waves can pass through the event horizon of a black hole edit

Hi - this is a quick note to explain why I have reverted your recent edits to black hole and event horizon. If I understand your edits correctly, you seem to be claiming that gravitational waves generated inside the event horizon of a black hole can pass through the event horizon and be detected in the universe outside the black hole. My understanding is that the region inside the event horizon is causally disconnected from the outside, so nothing, not even gravitational waves, can pass from inside to outside. If you are going to reinstate your edits, you need to provide a reliable source that supports your claim. Gandalf61 (talk) 10:29, 20 June 2021 (UTC)Reply

 
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Hi, and thanks for your explanation.
Causal disconnection so that nothing can pass from inside to outside is just too strong and clearly incoherent claim. The gravitation of the mass inside the event horizon is affecting continuosly to outside timespace. The formation of the event horizon is not discontinuing it in any way. A term nothing should include all kinds of effects, but it clearly does not if it is disregarding the effect of gravity. It is quite much to leave out.
Because the gravitation is affecting outside world, all events causing any change to the mass inside are affecting to outside timespace. This includes gravitational waves. As I know there does not exist any claims or proof that gravitational waves would not reach all regions that gravitation is reaching. Or is there?
The event horizon is just a non-physical mathematical distance where light an massive particles are assumed to stop. That distance is supervised solely by gravitation, there is not any reason why gravitation could not move and make it vibrate freely.
I do not know sources to note this loud and clear, it would surely require some work to find it. Would the same Hawking's claim that there are no black holes make enough source:?) Yoxxa (talk) 12:44, 20 June 2021 (UTC)Reply