If you mean that somehow the black hole can be removed or flung out of the galaxy than, no it can't, because the galaxy (or more specifically all the stars, gases, and asteroids, and dust clouds) orbit around the central black hole in a galaxy, they are just moving to fast and to far away to be pulled into the black hole, and if a black hole where to move the surrounding stars and debris would follow is path.
A galaxy is bigger than a black hole.
no it does not depend on the black hole in the middle of the galaxy
no the galaxy is way to big for a black hole to do much in fact we now know that there is a supermassive black hole in the center of our galaxy right now.
The Milky Way (our galaxy) is believed to have one in the center. Every or almost every galaxy has a black hole in the middle of it.
No. No black hole is big enough to do that.
It seems that just about EVERY galaxy has a huge ("supermassive") black hole in its center.
every galaxy got a black hole in the center even our galaxy, the milky way.
There is no black hole in our solar system.It is believed, however, that there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, and that there are black holes at the center of every galaxy.
A blazar is an elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole at the center.
Yes. You see, a supermassive blackhole constantly eats away at the galaxy it inhabits. but for clusters the gravitational field is so immense, it already is pulling whole galaxies into its singularity. An example could be that our galaxy, as well as others are being pulled to a phenomenon known as The Great Attraction which could very well be a supermassive black hole.
It is believed that all galaxies have a black hole at their centers.
There has yet to be evidence that a black hole exists in M65.