I believe that a black hole with only relativistic mass can exist, in other words, it only get's its mass from relativistic effects. If all matter in the black hole is photones, it has no heavy mass.
Instead it gets the heavy mass:
mass m(photones in black hole)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) - m(photones in black hole)
I feel like to inform you that pluto, the non-planet, might be a such. A very big such.
Most people would consider that nonsence, but if you would just put in the calcule it's speed, and you'll know what I'm saying.
Pluto would have, in that case, around 40 solar masses.
But then again, maybe that's impossible.
Instead it gets the heavy mass:
mass m(photones in black hole)/sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) - m(photones in black hole)
I feel like to inform you that pluto, the non-planet, might be a such. A very big such.
Most people would consider that nonsence, but if you would just put in the calcule it's speed, and you'll know what I'm saying.
Pluto would have, in that case, around 40 solar masses.
But then again, maybe that's impossible.
Last edited: