This is one of the deepest conceptual points in general relativity—you’re asking exactly the right question.
Let’s answer it carefully, because the intuitive “mass sits somewhere” picture breaks down.
🧭 Short answer
After a black hole forms:
The mass is not sitting at a place like ordinary matter.
Instead, it is encoded in the entire spacetime geometry outside the horizon.
🪐 Before collapse: easy
For a star:
- Matter is distributed throughout a volume
- The gravitational field comes from that matter
So you can say:
👉 “The mass is where the matter is.”
🕳️ After collapse: the picture changes
Once the star collapses into a black hole:
- All matter is hidden behind the event horizon
- Classical general relativity says it ends up at (or near) the singularity
But here’s the key twist:
🔑 The external gravitational field no longer “points” to a location of matter.
🌌 Where is the mass really?
In GR, mass isn’t like a lump sitting somewhere.
Instead:
- Mass is defined by how spacetime behaves far away
- This is called the ADM mass (or similar global quantities)
So:
✅ The mass is a global property of spacetime, not a local object.
🧠 Crucial idea: gravity without matter
After formation:
- The outside region is vacuum (no matter present)
- Yet gravity is still there
This is not a bug—it’s a feature of GR:
Spacetime curvature can exist without local matter, as long as it’s sourced somewhere in the past.
🧲 Analogy (imperfect but helpful)
Imagine:
- You create a whirlpool in water using a paddle
- Then remove the paddle
The water keeps swirling.
Where is the cause of the swirl now?
- Not at a point
- It’s in the motion of the fluid itself
Similarly:
The black hole’s mass is encoded in the curvature pattern of spacetime.
🕳️ What about the singularity?
You might think:
“Okay, so the mass must be at the singularity.”
But this is tricky:
- The singularity is not part of spacetime (it’s where the theory breaks down)
- GR does not describe it physically
So we can’t really say:
✅ “The mass is located there” in any normal sense
Instead:
The singularity is a sign that our description has failed, not a well-behaved object holding mass.
🧩 The key shift in thinking
In Newtonian physics:
- Matter → causes gravity
- Gravity → points back to matter
In GR:
- Matter helps determine spacetime
- But once formed, spacetime can carry:
- Mass
- Energy
- Angular momentum
Even in regions with no matter present
🌀 Back to your rotation question
Now this ties directly to your earlier question:
- The black hole’s angular momentum is not stored in spinning matter
- The mass is not sitting somewhere like a lump
Both are:
✅ Encoded in the geometry of spacetime itself
🧠 A sharper statement
The most precise answer is:
A black hole’s mass is defined by how spacetime curves at infinity, not by a localized distribution of matter inside.
⚠️ Important limitation
All of this is within classical general relativity.
We expect:
- A future theory of quantum gravity may give a clearer answer
- Possibly replacing the singularity with something physical
But right now:
“Where is the mass?”
has the answer:
👉 Not anywhere local you can point to.
✅ Bottom line
- The matter that formed the black hole has fallen behind the horizon
- It no longer acts like a normal mass distribution
- The mass lives in the gravitational field (spacetime curvature) itself
- The singularity is not a usable physical “location” of mass
If you want, the next natural step is exploring how mass can be defined purely from geometry (e.g., ADM mass or Komar mass), which makes this idea fully precise.