A black hole may have an electrical charge. This is assumed to be usually insignificant, compared to its gravity.
mostley gravitational forces.
Given that tides are caused by gravity, and that black holes are a major SOURCE of gravity, it isn't clear that black holes would be affected at all by other gravitational sources. Of course, we can know nothing at all about whatever is inside the event horizon of a black hole.
it is said that there are black holes in space which we have discovered is true and how gravity realates to a black hole is well, a black hole is said to suck away other universes we have not discovered yet gravity pulls things to the ground and a black hole uses that same pull force to suck in universes
A black hole will attract you through its gravity - just like any other object will.
They don't. The attractive force between two objects is due to gravity. Black holes behave exactly like any other mass in this respect.
No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.
Black holes are the cause of gravity... Black holes are created when a supernova condenses, creating a black hole. It condenses because gravity has won the battle between the star's core. So basically, gravity fuels a Black hole.
Theoretically, a massive enough cloud of gas or dust, too massive to form stars, could collapse into a black hole. This is one ideas as to how the supermassive black holes in the cores of galaxies may have formed. Planets and other such objects cannot become black holes because they do not have enough force to completely collapse. Once it forms, a planet is about as compressed as it will ever be.
Yes. Anything with mass has gravity and thus tidal forces. Tidal forces are a consequence of the fact that the strength of gravity from an object depends on the distance from its center of mass. For example, since your feet are closer to Earth's center than your head is, they experience a stronger gravitational pull than your head does. However since that difference is tiny compared with Earth's radius, the tidal force you experience is much too small to be felt. With a black hole, however, you an get much closer to the center of mass than you can with any other object of similar mass. Tidal forces near a stellar mass black hole are enormous.
No, dark holes do not send people to other places. Black holes are formed when a massive star collapses under its gravity, creating a region of spacetime from which nothing, not even light, can escape.
Usually there is gravity. There may be other forces involved too, depending on the situation.Usually there is gravity. There may be other forces involved too, depending on the situation.Usually there is gravity. There may be other forces involved too, depending on the situation.Usually there is gravity. There may be other forces involved too, depending on the situation.
Inside a black hole, gravity becomes incredibly strong, pulling everything toward the center. This results in a point of infinite density called a singularity. At the singularity, gravity is so powerful that it warps spacetime to the point where normal physics breaks down.