- 2,548
- 2,146
I thought I made it clear with my evaluation in the blog that up to Math 2 (up to the GPE end) I was fine with and made it clear that I wasn't comfortable with treating it as a real black hole 1 to 1 thus not accepting any of the other methods that followed since it involved doing so (regardless if others did). Granted, my reasons are a little different on that front and I was willing to be overruled by other CGMs that feel comfortable treating it as one. But alas, no one is clearly comfortable with treating it as a for real black hole.@Migue79 As you evaluated the calc in the OP, can you comment here on which, if any, parts of it you think are suitable?
Not to mention, I was told ages ago by Spinosaurus that we don't really find LS from resisting the gravitational pull of a black hole so Math 3 can't really be used for the OP profiles even with me being comfortable with Math 1 and 2.
Did, and I find the responses to DT's points a liiiiiiiittle more convincing. I get that we (apparently) expect fictional natural phenomena to adhere to any descriptions that use their real life counterparts (i.e. BB's Yami Yami no Mi sucking in light every time it appears and it having massive Destructive Capability), but if we're given believable and reasonable reasons for why it doesn't do so in those instances, then I feel like those can be overlooked. And I feel like in the instances provided by the opposing side, they were (unless there's any further context that I missed). Ntm, with a star-sized planet in question, I wouldn't really expect the human-sized Yami Yami no Mi to instantly fold the thing as argued above. Maybe over-time it's reasonable to expect (infinite gravity in general be damned), but now I am going off on tangents so I'll stop.Also, check out posts from DontTalkDT here and the responses made to him, please.
I'll stay here tuned in to see if anything that pops up here changes my mind on the whole ordeal. I gtg eat now, tho.