Nope. The closest black hole is 1600 light years away - way too far for anyone to travel to. And even if someone did manage to get there, they wouldn't be able to come back if they went inside of a black hole: they would be stretched like a piece of spaghetti and killed.
noone can go black hole as the name suggest it is a hole which is black so how any one can go ad com back...
Dont hold me to this, but any thing that goes into a black hole does not come out. In suggesting that you reapear, you would be be refering to a wormhole
A lot would depend on the mass of the black hole. A black hole the mass of an asteroid (should any of that size exist) would probably enter the Solar System and get back out again, just like any comet. We might not even notice it. A black hole the mass of a star would probably cause a lot of disruption in the orbits of the planets.A lot would depend on the mass of the black hole. A black hole the mass of an asteroid (should any of that size exist) would probably enter the Solar System and get back out again, just like any comet. We might not even notice it. A black hole the mass of a star would probably cause a lot of disruption in the orbits of the planets.A lot would depend on the mass of the black hole. A black hole the mass of an asteroid (should any of that size exist) would probably enter the Solar System and get back out again, just like any comet. We might not even notice it. A black hole the mass of a star would probably cause a lot of disruption in the orbits of the planets.A lot would depend on the mass of the black hole. A black hole the mass of an asteroid (should any of that size exist) would probably enter the Solar System and get back out again, just like any comet. We might not even notice it. A black hole the mass of a star would probably cause a lot of disruption in the orbits of the planets.
No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.
Nobody went to any black hole, I can tell you that. If anyone were to go into one, they would be spaghettifyed! Also, if anyone made it into a black hole and went down all the way and came back out to live to tell the story, they'd go down in history.
Technically, no person has ever gone to a black hole, so no one has ever come back from one.Even if a person did enter a black hole, they would not be able to come back because of the intense gravitational force in the black hole. Once the person crosses the event horizon, they're gone forever.
Any matter that enters the black hole will be destroyed. Also, it will increase the black hole's size.
We know nothing about the conditions within a black hole, but it seems unlikely that a black hole could exist within a black hole, or even if this concept would have any meaning at all.
no
Your "weight" is the magnitude of the gravitational force between you and another mass. -- In deep space, far from any other mass, the gravitational force between you and any other mass would be very small, but never zero. -- Near a back hole, the gravitational force between you and the black hole would be (gravitational constant) x (your mass) x (black hole's mass)/(your distance from the black hole)2
It's not a "remnant" of a black hole; there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way, period. And as far as I know it wasn't discovered by any single telescope; rather, it has been observed over several years, with different instruments, and scientists have come to the conclusion (based on such observations) that the only explanation for what they observed is a black hole.
That is very likely. 1) Every larger galaxy, or most of them, have a supermassive black hole in their center. 2) Since a certain percentage of star eventually become a stellar black hole, any galaxy should have several stellar black holes,in addition to the supermassive black hole.