English

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Etymology

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From anti- +‎ horizon.

Noun

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antihorizon (plural antihorizons)

  1. (astrophysics) The opposite of an event horizon, allowing escape but not entry.
    • 2002, Jim Al-Khalili, Black Holes, Wormholes and Time Machines[1], page 199:
      White holes must therefore be surrounded by the opposite of an event horizon, something known as an antihorizon, which would allow one-way traffic out and never in. Unfortunately, antihorizons are very unstable and get converted to normal horizons in a matter of seconds after forming.
    • 2009, Jon Schiller, 21st Century Cosmology[2], page 54:
      The Kruskal diagram of the Schwarzschild geometry showed it to possess not only a normal horizon but also an antihorizon, beyond which there was, supposedly, another Universe.
    • 2010, Enrico Rodrigo, The Physics of Stargates[3]:
      To distant observers the light appears, due to gravitational time dilation, to slow down as it approaches the antihorizon.
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