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What if there is any real limit of energy that can ever be accumulated in the gravitational field?

Described as: E(max) = m(max) * c^2

So... If some black hole reached that limit, (I would expect) the energy from inside the black hole could leak outside to the universe.

Mauro ALLEGRANZA
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Tom
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  • Welcome to Philosophy SE! Your question doesn't seem to be about Philosophy, it may be better suited to https://physics.stackexchange.com/. If there is a philosophy question in here try to reformulate... – christo183 Oct 18 '19 at 05:26
  • In the Physics thread I was told it's off-topic there :( – Tom Oct 18 '19 at 18:27

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There is no limit to the size of a black hole, and no way for any of its contents to "leak" out of it.

niels nielsen
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  • It is, and my answer is a simplified take on the physics. In my experience on the physics stack exchange, a question worded as this one is will get booted for lack of prior research, outside mainstream physics, or unclear what you're asking. – niels nielsen Oct 18 '19 at 05:31
  • the pursuit of knowledge is the asking of many questions. good luck on your quest. -NN – niels nielsen Oct 18 '19 at 17:29