No living thing ever goes into a black hole survives. One needs food, water and air to suvive which surely is not in that. And also, due to the extremely dense gravity, anybody will die before knowing. You can't get lost, since you won't be alive to get lost.
No. No planet is massive enough to become a black hole. A black hole is the remains of a dead, supermassive star.
It's the conflict between (1) the idea that at the quantum level, information can't get lost; and (2) the assumption that information about anything falling into a black hole DOES get lost.
What is at the centre of a black hole is very speculative. It is theorised that by Stephen Hawking that at the centre of a black hole there is a thing called a singularity. This is a place where the mathematics to do with black holes totally break down and all sense is lost. Hope it helps. Its a very hard subject
One common term used is black hole evaporation. This relates to a mechanism wherein the black hole's mass is gradually lost through Hawking radiation; but the rate of loss is inversely proportional to the black hole's size and thus accelerates as it shrinks. At the moment it vanishes it is thought to do so with a burst of gamma radiation; the Fermi space telescope is intended to search for such gamma flashes.
They'll be lost for life...! And would never be found!
A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.
If you were to throw a clock into a black hole, the extreme gravitational pull would distort the perception of time on the clock. As the clock approaches the black hole's event horizon, time would appear to slow down for an observer outside the black hole. Eventually, the clock's information would be lost beyond the event horizon.
In the context of a black hole, the boundary refers to the event horizon, which is the point of no return beyond which nothing, not even light, can escape the gravitational pull of the black hole. It marks the boundary between the observable universe outside the black hole and the region where all information is lost to the singularity at the center.
Light that passes near a black hole but does not cross the event horizon is bent toward it in what is called gravitational lensing. The closer the light passes to the black hole, the more it is bent. For someone with an up-close view, this lensing would result in a highly distorted image of whatever is behind the black hole. Photons that cross the event horizon are lost inside of it forever, and their energy is added to the mass of the black hole.
A black hole originated as a star, that is, the star converted to a black hole.
If you fall into a black hole, you'll go into the black hole and nowhere else.
In a black hole, gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. This means that whatever goes into a black hole is trapped inside forever, making the saying "what happens in a black hole stays in a black hole" true.