yep.
A black hole has a much larger mass than a planet. The mass of a black hole, however, is contained in a point that is smaller than some fundamental particles. The event horizon of a typical stellar mass black hole is much smaller than any planet, but the event horizons of supermassive black holes are much larger.
Black holes can be many different sizes. Therefore, there are some black holes that are bigger than the sun, and there are some that are smaller than the sun.
Black holes. They can be so large that they can suck up universes at a time
Yes, of course, Black holes are so much bigger than our sun and our earth is about 300 times smaller than our sun. Black holes can suck it the entire galaxy, even light.
After the black hole dies out, (see When do black holes die and/or How does a black hole get smaller) it will become just a vacuum.
No. At least, the black holes in existence so far are much smaller in size, and have much less mass, than a galaxy. However, note that the black hole in the center of the largest galaxies can have more mass (but not more diameter) than some dwarf galaxies.
they look like worm holes but even bigger. they are in space
Black holes are created when in a Supernova-explosion or after a collision between two neutronstars (which are mini black holes). The star collapses and the gravity becomes stronger and stronger, dragging everything towards the center. In the end, the gravity becomes so strong that not even light can escape.
No. When more matter falls into a black hole, it only makes it bigger and gives it even stronger gravity.
it has holes that are bigger than water but smaller than what they filter
Black holes are not infinitely small, the radius of a black hole is the Planck length (1.62*10-35m). The reason, however, for this incredibly small distance is gravity. When large masses (such as those associated with black holes) accumulate, the mass pulls on other mass around it. With such a large mass, the pull becomes very large and all the other mass is pulled in more causing the radius to reduce. This continues to happen as more and more mass is added to the black hole, the stronger the pull and the smaller and smaller it becomes.
Not sure what you mean. M60 is a galaxy. Just about all galaxies have supermassive black holes in their center - and lots of smaller black holes. The supermassive black hole in M60 is estimated to have 4.5 billion solar masses - one of the largest known black holes.