Chocolate donut.
No, because you can't live on a black hole.
A Black Hole. Night is darker than day, but there is still artificial light and the light of celestial bodies. However, light cannot escape a black hole in space, so the area occupied by a black hole appears darker than night.
In the middle of a black hole, there is a single point of matter called a singularity. This is where space-time actually stops and nothing is beyond this point. Anything and everything that gets sucked up in the black hole goes here.
In the middle of a galaxy.
A supermassive black hole - with the mass of about 4,000,000 Suns.
no it does not depend on the black hole in the middle of the galaxy
doughnut
A good old ''donut''
They are round with a hole in the middle for an axle.
ALL larger galaxies have a black hole in their center.
There are lots and lots of black holes in space, but there is always a black hole in the middle of every galaxy.
No, because you can't live on a black hole.
The middle of the milky way is a black hole and a black hole cannot be made up as matter. The middle of the milky way has no size, but the black hole sucks the light making it look big in pictures. The actual size is nothing.
Small round grey metal with a hole in the middle.
A Black Hole. Night is darker than day, but there is still artificial light and the light of celestial bodies. However, light cannot escape a black hole in space, so the area occupied by a black hole appears darker than night.
No, if it had been sucked into a black hole, it wouldn't still be there shining in the night sky.
The event horizon of a black hole is a spherical area round the center of the black hole; it has a radius proportional to the mass of the black hole - a radius of about 2.95 kilometers for every solar mass.