Your question can't be answered in the way you wrote it. Astrophysicists think there's a massive black hole at the centre of our Milky Way galaxy, and they've spotted things that could be black holes in some solar systems in our galaxy. Further to this, you have dark energy and dark matter for example, along with practically an infinite amount of other "things" that you could count.
Don't know which black hole.
The Black Hole of Auschwitz has 187 pages.
For all scientific reasons, no astronaut had went inside a black hole. It would take many earth years to visit the black hole, so reaching a black hole is impossible.
Basically none. No atom will survive the forces in a black hole. (However, all the mass that falls into the black hole will still be there.)
A miniature black hole is what forms when atoms smash at a rate to form a mini black hole, gobbling many protons and neurons and other extremely tiny things. Don't worry, they still don't "eat" very much. They also don't last very long.
Nothing, unless a black hole comes very near to us. By the way, you shouldn't say "the" black hole, unless you make it clear which black hole you mean. There are many black holes.
Nobody has ever visited a black hole. The nearest known black hole is many light years away. Much to far away for us to reach it.
Black Hole is the enemy army and organisation in many advanced wars games, including: advanced wars black hole rising, and advanced wars dual strike.
Nobody has been killed by a black hole. If one were to directly impact earth, there would be no survivors.
no, a black hole is a region. With nothing, not even light could escape, is a black hole. Around the black hole, an event horizon that marks the point of no return. The way it is named: the Black Hole, is because "it absorbs all the light that hits the horizon, reflecting nothing, just like a perfect black body in thermodynamics." What many people don't know is that the black hole is divided into 3 parts: the 'singularity', which is in the centre. The 'inner event horizon', which is the point of no return in black holes. After passing the point, light or matter can't escape the gravitational pull of the black hole. The matter or light will then disappear. And the 'outer event horizon', is the outer layer of the black hole.
No one is known to have gone through a black hole, (at least, not the 'black hole' of interest to astrophysics). Humankind has not yet developed a practical means of space travel across the vast distances to even the nearest known black hole.
There is not "a" black hole, but many of them. The nearest known black hole is at a distance of several thousand light-years, but it is likely that there are others closer by: only black holes that are very near of a partner (in a binary system) are easily found.There is not "a" black hole, but many of them. The nearest known black hole is at a distance of several thousand light-years, but it is likely that there are others closer by: only black holes that are very near of a partner (in a binary system) are easily found.There is not "a" black hole, but many of them. The nearest known black hole is at a distance of several thousand light-years, but it is likely that there are others closer by: only black holes that are very near of a partner (in a binary system) are easily found.There is not "a" black hole, but many of them. The nearest known black hole is at a distance of several thousand light-years, but it is likely that there are others closer by: only black holes that are very near of a partner (in a binary system) are easily found.