Yes. A typical black hole has a mass similar to that of a large star and so would have the same same gravitational effects on objects in the general vicinity. At close range the gravity becomes extremely strong.
Yes, a black hole can move a planet. Black holes are so massive that they can alter the orbits of stars and star systems. This makes changing planetary motion nothing to a black hole.
No, black holes move.
Yes. A black hole can move just like anything else with mass.
No, because you can't live on a black hole.
Downwards
How far you have to move to remain in orbit around a black hole, or to escape it, depends on the distance from the black hole, as well as the black hole's mass.
An objects initial state is to stay in motion unless affected by another force. So a black hole, like any other body in the Universe will move unless something acts on it to stop that motion. So simplistically, a black hole will move, but in doing so, it will have an affect on anything it comes close to, each of which will affect it's motion. If the question was concerning whether a black hole could enter our Solar System, then not in the expected lifetime of the Solar System as the nearest black hole is over 1,600 light years away.
No. Nothing can escape a black one it crosses the event horizon. In most cases a black hole is in the vacuum of space, which cannot carry sound. Matter falling into a black hole will reach incredible speeds, potentially approaching the speed of light, so sound could not move though that matter, even away from the event horizon.
in brief we can not do this, but in my opinion black holes can do. I mean if you run, you need to a place that change that. but if you don't move, you don't need to place, but if we could send places to black hole then we were a witnesses, that every one place that go through black hole, time was changed for that
Once an object exits a black hole, it continues to move away from the black hole due to its momentum. The object may be altered by the extreme gravitational forces near the black hole, but it will no longer be trapped by its intense gravitational pull.
When an object gets too close to a black hole, the intense gravitational pull can cause it to be pulled in and trapped. However, if the object has enough speed and momentum, it may be able to escape the black hole's gravitational pull and move away from it. This process is known as "escaping" from a black hole.
First answer person:Nope. It's a planet and planets don't have black holes in the center of them: a black hole at it's center would eat the planet quickly and move on to the next and the next and the ....Second answer person (much handsomer):hmmm....well has anyone actually seen the center of a planet to show there's no black hole?Physicist Nassim Haramein, on the cutting edge of "fractal cosmology", mentioned in a lecture once that *everything* has a black hole at its centre (atoms, people, planets, etc).I'm not a physics whiz so I'll lose an argument if you try and debate me; however I would suggest searching for his name and checking out what he's got to say. (I heard his theory on an 8-hour Google Video epic).-DanPS Check this out (part 2 of the video): http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6151699791256390335#docid=-1895475242307393956 ... right at the beginning he talks about a black hole at the center of the sun.