Submitted by Sol33t303 t3_11g1vky in askscience
My basic understanding of orbital mechanics would suggest that this should be possible right? I assume there's nothing to get in your way to slow your orbit in the event horizon. In a normal orbit you gain speed as you approach periapsis, then that speed flings you back out to apoapsis. I don't see any reason this wouldn't apply in the event horizon of a black hole.
cygx t1_jany3wu wrote
No. The solutions to the relativistic version of the Kepler problem are different from the Newtonian ones:
You still have hyperbolic-like, parabolic-like and elliptic-like solutions. However, the parabolic ones can loop around the black hole a couple of times before going off to infinity, and the elliptic ones will have their perihelion precess around it. Additionally, you get solutions that cross the horizon and never come back out, eventually hitting the singularity, and trajectories that asymptotically approach a circular orbit.