The metric of a tidally distorted, nonrotating black hole is presented in a
light-cone coordinate system that penetrates the event horizon and possesses a
clear geometrical meaning. The metric is expressed as an expansion in powers of
r/R << 1, where r is a measure of distance from the black hole and R is the
local radius of curvature of the external spacetime; this is assumed to be much
larger than M, the mass of the black hole. The metric is calculated up to a
remainder of order (r/R)^4, and it depends on a family of tidal gravitational
fields which characterize the hole's local environment. The coordinate system
allows an easy identification of the event horizon, and expressions are derived
for its surface gravity and the rates at which the tidal interaction transfers
mass and angular momentum to the black hole.Comment: 4 pages. Final version, as it will appear in Physical Review Letter