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Apr 11 at 0:07 vote accept Roghan Arun
Mar 7 at 7:13 comment added safesphere @MiltonTheMeme You’ve heard “non-local” more than once already, but in a misleading way. In relation to the event horizon, “non-local” does not mean far away. The position of the Schwarzschild-like horizon in space is given by its radius and therefore is local. So we know exactly where it is, but we also know that it does not form until some (infinitely) distant (“non-local”) moment of the cosmological time. So it is non-local in time, not in space.
Mar 7 at 1:48 comment added Roghan Arun Aren't electrons moving around causing a quantum field disturbance, and so isn't there a non zero probability of a photon spawning further away instead of close to the electron or does the photon always spawn somewhere?
Mar 7 at 0:21 history answered Anders Sandberg CC BY-SA 4.0