Black Holes can destroy anything in their path. Only when the 'Hypergiant' is within range of the Black Hole.
Black holes completely destroy objects the enter them.
Black holes do not actively seek out planets to destroy. However, if a planet were to get too close to a black hole, the intense gravitational forces could disrupt or even pull the planet into the black hole. So, in that sense, a black hole has the potential to "kill" a planet by tearing it apart.
That is really not known. My theory is no, and apparently not. the black hole do not destroy but do not let out usual light, it do swallows the objects but it is not really known what happens next other than the swallowing, it is also known IN THEORY to be many black holes that is to small to be affected by around us too. and we also have wite holes.
Yes, that's where they are. A black hole on Earth would utterly destroy the Earth, in a very short time.The existence of black holes is now generally accepted, by the way.
Black Hole simply cannot be destroyed because Black holes have so much Gravity That even light cannot pass or go from near the black holes. Black Holes pull the object passing from 10,000,00 (10 Lakh) away from them. So nobody can go near them to destroy it
Because planets and stars have went into them and got destroyed.
the sun can be destroyed by the molecules of the oxygen in the high quantity .the third form of helium and the oxygen can havethe capacity to destroy it black holes in the large quantity can destroy earth.
Black holes destroy planets or stars by exerting a powerful gravitational pull, which can rip them apart through a process known as spaghettification. Additionally, the intense tidal forces near a black hole can also strip away the outer layers of a star or planet, ultimately consuming them.
Black holes do not destroy things in the traditional sense of actively targeting and destroying objects. However, anything that crosses the event horizon of a black hole – known as the point of no return – will be unable to escape its gravitational pull, effectively being consumed by the black hole. This process, known as spaghettification, involves the stretching and tearing apart of matter due to the extreme gravitational forces near a black hole.
Black holes do not form on Earth. Black holes are created when a massive star collapses in on itself, leading to an incredibly dense core where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. These events typically occur in space, not on Earth.
Black holes fascinate me by there huge size on great gravitational force. The fact that light can't even get out so we cant study the center much is also pretty amazing. The thing that disturbed many astrophysicists when black holes were first theorized was the fact that the theory predicted an object that would destroy the theory that predicted it.
Hypergiants are very rare and they have a ver short lifespan, and thus they are difficult to observe.