Yes. It's gravity stronger than any force in the universe.
The "diameter" of a black hole is usually taken as the diameter of the event horizon.
Yes because he is into space and black holes ate in space so he must be working on them
Gravitation? Yes black holes have enormous gravitation but it is not completely vacuum. When matter gets sucked into blackholes, noone knows where the matter ends up. Black holes originate from a really dense star collapsing on itself like a cookie crumbling if you crush it with enough force.
They are either other solar systems, nebulas (Dead solar systems) Blackholes, other galaxies or stars that have no orbits
Description: the whole hole is described as hole-like, meaning an abyss of darkness. Darkness is associated with the color black. That is the whole hole truth.
This is simply because their gravitational pull is so strong.
No
Stephen Hawking is currently researching the origins of blackholes and the effects of blackholes on the matter surrounding it.
If blackholes reach the earth the earth will destroy. Blackhole are to large it can eat star easily.
Blackholes, space, etc
Albert Einstein.
In space mostly around groups of old stars
It has both. Hope this helped, WoodWorkingMaster
The supermassive blackholes at the center of galaxies.
yes they as scientists found in the middle of the messier galaxy
There are two ways blackholes form:Massive blackholes - these are formed by collapse of stars having more than 3 times the mass of our sun, when the stars die.Micro blackholes - these could have only formed in the big bang. Their event horizons are roughly the size of a proton and their mass is similar to that of a mountain. Unlike massive blackholes, which last forever, these evaporate then explode giving them a limited lifetime.
Sufficiently large gravitational bodies... blackholes are the most common.