In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
Just like any object, a black hole will attract objects in its surrondings. The Sun can "suck in" a comet that ventures too close, for example, but the Sun is not a black hole. The Earth can "suck in" a meteor that comes close to the Earth.The distinctive feature of a black hole is that nothing gets out again - except indirectly, through the Hawking radiation, and that is very, very slow.Just like any object, a black hole will attract objects in its surrondings. The Sun can "suck in" a comet that ventures too close, for example, but the Sun is not a black hole. The Earth can "suck in" a meteor that comes close to the Earth.The distinctive feature of a black hole is that nothing gets out again - except indirectly, through the Hawking radiation, and that is very, very slow.Just like any object, a black hole will attract objects in its surrondings. The Sun can "suck in" a comet that ventures too close, for example, but the Sun is not a black hole. The Earth can "suck in" a meteor that comes close to the Earth.The distinctive feature of a black hole is that nothing gets out again - except indirectly, through the Hawking radiation, and that is very, very slow.Just like any object, a black hole will attract objects in its surrondings. The Sun can "suck in" a comet that ventures too close, for example, but the Sun is not a black hole. The Earth can "suck in" a meteor that comes close to the Earth.The distinctive feature of a black hole is that nothing gets out again - except indirectly, through the Hawking radiation, and that is very, very slow.
A black hole will "such things up" if such things get sufficiently close to the black hole. This is a result of its gravity. Similarly, our Sun will "suck things up" if they get too close - for example, a comet might crash onto the Sun; the comet's mass will increase the mass of the Sun. Please note that if, for example, our Sun becomes a black hole (it probably won't, since it doesn't have enough mass for that), without changing its mass in the process, the Earth will continue orbiting the black hole as it orbited the Sun before. It will NOT be "sucked up" in the process - the black hole's gravitational attraction would be the same as the Sun's attraction before becoming a black hole.
No. Assuming the sun's mass were compressed into a black hole, the sun would still have the same mass. The gravitational pull created by that mass would not be affected beyond the distance of the sun's present surface area.
the sun might become a black hole and suck up all the planets in our solersystem. (FYI no mater what, the world will tern dark forever)
No, the sun cannot "suck in" the earth. The sun's immense gravitational pull keeps the earth in orbit around it, but it does not have the ability to physically pull or "suck in" the earth.
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.
A black hole doesn't "suck" things in. It pulls them in with it's immense gravity. In order to suck something in, there must be something to fill in empty space such as air.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
i doubt it because it sucks in everything and it covers light. it could suck in the sun with ease. it itself is a star that has blown up. the star has to be realy big to become a black hole
yes... it can because a black hole can even suck light in :) lol hope it helped.................................. c it can suck in nearley everything
Black Hole Sun was created in 1994-05.
A black hole near Neptune -- or near any other object in space -- would suck up that planet (or that object). Fortunately, there nearest black hole to our Solar System is several thousand light years away.