Black holes are theorized to exist because of a hypothetical divide by zero situation in Schwarzchild’s solution to the General Relativity Field equation.
Question: Doesn’t Schwarzchild’s solution assume an asymptotically flat space-time? Is this a valid assumption for a region near the event horizon of a black hole?
I can’t find any sources discussing this which is why I ask.
Physics student here. It won’t do shit. When black holes merge, all they do is emit gravitational waves, nothing more, nothing less.
Black holes are theorized to exist because of a hypothetical divide by zero situation in Schwarzchild’s solution to the General Relativity Field equation.
Question: Doesn’t Schwarzchild’s solution assume an asymptotically flat space-time? Is this a valid assumption for a region near the event horizon of a black hole?
I can’t find any sources discussing this which is why I ask.