Actually as a solar system nears a black hole, any planets within the solar system would be crushed and compacted, like so much garbage, and become part of the accretion disk - long before it eventually disappears accross the threshold of the black hole's event horizon.
There are no black holes anywhere near Earth, so no we won't get sucked into one.
you make them follow you to the black hole but dont go too fast or the shark will go back.do it one shark at a time.dont get sucked in the black hole
you have to go to space and find one and get sucked into the black hole
If there was one nearby it could, but as there isn't it won't.
Do you know where the black hole is shoot at one of the sharks and lead them to the black hole but stay around the black hole and the shark get's sucked in.Do it one at a time the ones that dont get sucked in teleport back to the planet.Oh and by the way im a kid!
Nothing can be seen in a black hole because all the light particles are sucked into the depths of the hole, and then no one knows what happens....
because you'll get suked in one and then every thing will be sucked
No human has ever come near a black hole. If one did, the intense gravitational pull of the black hole would pull them in and tear them to atoms, long before they reached the event horizon.
No one really knows. You might possibly die because they say that the gravity is too strong, not even light can escape it. Others think that it will take you to another universe. No one who might've been sucked into a black hole has ever lived to tell about it.
You have to get past the Space Sharks. Shoot them (one at a time or all three at once) and lure them up and slightly right, to the Black Hole at x-85 y-47. You can steer around the hole, but they will be sucked in.
None. No rocket has ever gone anywhere near a black hole (seeing as how the nearest one is 1600 light years away).
Bend over and kiss your bum good bye - you are now becoming a part of a jumbled mass of electrons, protons and neutrons that no one can tell the difference between a tree and a dog.