Nobody knows, but most probably the enormous gravitation of the black hole(which traps light in its core, therefore it is black from outside) breaks down every material to its very elemental pieces
Yes - The dense nature of a black hole rearranges and transforms matter into energy. In fact, even before matter crosses the threshold of the black hole's event horizon, the accretion disk of a black hole provides for a formidal barrier. Despite its invisible interior, the presence of a black hole can be inferred through its interaction with other matter and with electromagnetic radiation such as light. Matter falling onto a black hole can form an accretion disk heated by friction, forming some of the brightest objects in the universe.
The Black Hole will explode because the gravity of a Black Hole is formed by the matter that is in the process of going intothe Black Hole, and not that matter that has already gone inside.
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.
An active black hole is a black hole that it by all manner of terms is "feeding". That is, it is accreting matter, or sucking matter into itself. Most black holes are dormant and don't show any signs of accreting matter.
No, nothing can escape a black hole
black holes swallow all energy and matter around them, including electricity
A black hole is a void in space-time where gravity is so strong that no matter or energy can escape the effects of its force.
Black holes are hidden behind an even horizon we do not know what happen in side them.
From the black hole itself? Nothing. No matter or energy can escape from a black hole. From the accretion disk AROUND the black hole, where matter is accelerated to light speed at the event horizon? All possible frequencies of electromagnetic radiation can be emitted from the accretion disk, but the typical "signature" of a black hole is mostly hard X-rays.
Yes - The dense nature of a black hole rearranges and transforms matter into energy. In fact, even before matter crosses the threshold of the black hole's event horizon, the accretion disk of a black hole provides for a formidal barrier. Despite its invisible interior, the presence of a black hole can be inferred through its interaction with other matter and with electromagnetic radiation such as light. Matter falling onto a black hole can form an accretion disk heated by friction, forming some of the brightest objects in the universe.
The Black Hole will explode because the gravity of a Black Hole is formed by the matter that is in the process of going intothe Black Hole, and not that matter that has already gone inside.
They're still called black holes. A black hole remains defined as a black hole as long as it absorb everything near them, both energy and matter, including gas.
The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.The rotation is not related to the black hole's ability to attract matter. The attraction depends only on the black hole's mass.
1.Scientists view the orbit or matter and energy around it 2.the black hole send of X-rays, which scintists detect 3.A chicken told them so
All the matter that collapsed into the black hole, as well as any matter that fell into the black hole after the initial collapse. The only distinguishable part of such matter is its mass - any structures of matter, even atoms, get destroyed.
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.
An active black hole is a black hole that it by all manner of terms is "feeding". That is, it is accreting matter, or sucking matter into itself. Most black holes are dormant and don't show any signs of accreting matter.