the answer is no; the speed of light is the universal speed limit, nothing travels faster
A black hole is a collapsed star, like the sun, that is very small in size, but, the gravitation pull is so strong, that a person is ripped to shreds if they get near it. A black hole gets it's name from the fact that the gravitation pull is so strong not even light can be reflected from it. We can't see black holes, but, we can tell they are there by the effect they have on the objects near them. They are whirlpools in space, pulling objects into them. When we see a trail of objects being pulled into darkness, that's a black hole.
Upon falling towards a black hole the "front" is pulled more than the "back" causing objects to stretch.
yes objects painted black dry faster than those painted white because the black absorbs more heat than the white
Black absorbs more energy than white- this extra energy could explain the faster drying time.
Black Dries Faster Than White
Who said things go faster as they get nearer to a black hole ? Oh yes ... an objectfalling under the influence of gravitation is accelerated. OK. But no. Things do, butlight is not an object, and it doesn't go faster than 300,000 km/sec .
There is no definite boundary for matter not being pulled toward a black hole. At large distances the effects of a black hole's gravity are not different from that of a different object of the same mass. How far out a black hole's gravity is dominant depends on that black hole's mass and its proximity to other massive objects.
yes objects painted black dry faster than those painted white because the black absorbs more heat than the white
No. Nothing, not even light can escape from within the event horizon. Since light can't get out, we can't see anything inside, which is why black holes are black.
Gravitation.
Immense gravitational forces would cause large mass objects to be stretched and compacted as it nears the black hole. Whatever is closer gets pulled in first, providing for unequal gravitational attraction.
No