so technically it doesn't have 'infinite density' in that one could divide the mass by the volume defined by the Schwarzchild radius and get a volume.
And what density does it have non-"technically"?
The original claim was "Um, yes, it's infinitely dense", where does that claim come from?
Ehm, yes. You're wrong, she's right. There are no stable orbits inside the event horizon.
Says who? Results from what theory?
I don't want to calculate the minimum required orbital velocity myself, but after checking the
orbital calculatorThere seems to be a constant factor:
"escape velocity" x 0,7 = "orbital velocity"
So, light could indeed reach the required speed to maintain a stable orbit.
Of course this (probably wrongly) assumes classical physics
You can treat the inside of the event horizon as a homogeneous distribution of mass or as a point source. It doesn't matter. Light must fall towards the center.
Why?
@Rian
Thx for the book name, that sounds interesting. (Though it might be a little hard to read it in english :/ )
For the coordinate system... yes, it will be pulled inward, but not within finite time by an outside observer, while it is already a black hole according to an outside observer (that's something I didn't explicitly state before, probably a mistake).
So, for an outside observer, something can (and will) have a finite mass distributed in a non zero space, while still counting as a black hole, and to get back to the original statement:
Um, yes, it's infinitely dense, thus the singularity.
It's not infinitely dense.