yes and no depends on size of hole :]
First answer person:Nope. It's a planet and planets don't have black holes in the center of them: a black hole at it's center would eat the planet quickly and move on to the next and the next and the ....Second answer person (much handsomer):hmmm....well has anyone actually seen the center of a planet to show there's no black hole?Physicist Nassim Haramein, on the cutting edge of "fractal cosmology", mentioned in a lecture once that *everything* has a black hole at its centre (atoms, people, planets, etc).I'm not a physics whiz so I'll lose an argument if you try and debate me; however I would suggest searching for his name and checking out what he's got to say. (I heard his theory on an 8-hour Google Video epic).-DanPS Check this out (part 2 of the video): http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6151699791256390335#docid=-1895475242307393956 ... right at the beginning he talks about a black hole at the center of the sun.
The supermassive black hole at the center of our own Milky Way galaxy , Sagittarius A*, weighs in at around 4.1 million solar masses.. which calculates to a radius of about 8 million miles. By comparison, Mercury gets as close as about 28 million miles to the Sun.
There is no atmosphere. Anything near the black hole is busy being pressed into a single lumpy paste to be compressed to the hardest coldest it can be. The materials above a black hole depend on nearby materials: what stars or comets or asteroids are there to feed it. Think of a car crusher: the crusher turns a 10' car into a 3' block. Well a black hole has lots of crushers - each one takes the last one's material and crushed it further. 10' to 9', to 8' to 7'...... to 0.25 inch to 0.125 inch to 0.0625 inch to 0.03125 inch to 0.01512 inch to 0.0075 inch to .... Any atmosphere it might ever have is pulled in immediately.
troposphere atmospheric layer is 8 miles where the airplanes fly at
no because black holes are so amazingly dense that nothing can escape. also that when something enters a black hole the denseness automattically crushes it after it sucks something in like a vacuum.No. That is how a black hole is defined.Real Answer: Once light crosses what is called the event horizon (Point of no return even if your traveling at the speed of light ) 3.2 x 10^8 m/s , that 3.2 with the decimal moved to the right 8 times meters per second.meaning it gets close enough so that the inward force of gravity that the black hole produces (unfathomable) creates a verticle velocity of the speed of light and bends the light inward into the black hole where it never escapes. Or you could say that it creates an enormous inward horizontal gravity force that will bend that light because as E=mc^2 explains , Energy is the square of the mass of an abject times the speed of light squared. or we could say that the mass of an object is the speed of light squared divided by its energy ( Kenetic plus potential).To simplify things: A black hole is defined as 'a region of space from which nothing can escape'. This may need a little explanation.The first thing you need is a singularity. A singularity is an object which is both very small and very heavy, so it has a very large gravitational field strength. Around the singularity is something called the event horizon. This is not a separate entity but is the name we give for the 'edge' of the black hole. The gravitational effects of the singularity can be felt outside of the event horizon. The event horizon merely marks the 'boundary' between ordinary space and space which nothing can escape from (also know as a black hole). The reason nothing can escape from a black hole is that the gravitational force exerted by the singularity pulls things towards it so strongly that the only way to escape is to travel faster than light. Nothing can travel faster than light so nothing can escape. The field strength is so great that even light 'falls' towards the singularity.I hope that makes more sense (I don't know what the above are talking about vacuums and energy-mass conversions for, it just seems to complicate it)
I believe a Ford 8 hole will fit any 8 hole. The center hole is bigger on Ford than Chevy and also Dodge.
The Black Hole of Glenrenald - 1915 was released on: USA: 8 December 1915
8 inch sub
As long as they both have the same hole count ( 8 hole on most ) and size.
Create a black hole and you will destroy it.
35/9 cubic yards for every foot deep.
1460 is the boot style ( 8 hole boot ). Black greasy is the type of leather.
NO! Even though they look the same, the center hole on 1987 up 8 hole rims are bigger than your 1983 rims.
There should be a small square hole near the tensioner pully. A 3/8 socket driver will fit in the hole and then you can losen the tensioner.
The problem is with the desciption "Bike Pump hole" These are designed to take many diferent fittings. I would be tempted to use a drill and a 1/8 NPT to make it all fit.
Front of the engine where you see a square hole where a 1/2 inch breaker bar would fit
Probably 5/8" or 18mm But the socket won't fit down the hole for the plug. I tried a 13mm thin wall socket. It doesn't fit!