>>14223543Hydrostatic pressure I guess. I always found it curious.
That and I've never quite understood black holes desu. It is said that at the event horizon time is passing so slowly for you relative to the rest of the universe that you would observe a near infinite amount of time passing, the universe growing old, cold, and dying, before you ever reached the singularity. So how then is a singularity ever formed? Since after its conception, everything that ever entered would be effectively stuck in time on the way there, but never reaching it? Does this mean that really black holes are just like 3d layers of tree rings, with matter and light stuck infinitely falling just planck lengths from each other, always falling but never reaching it. And that matter just barely inside the event horizon is enough to increase it's mass and increase the volume of the black hole ever larger?