No. There closest black holes are many light years away, much farther than anything we build can travel.
Nebula. according to nasa.
Yes, a black hole could travel through space.
The sun got so bright one day that it burned a hole through the moon, the other half of the moon got sucked up into a black hole in space. This was all witnessed by NASA in 1901.
One does not simply "pass through" a black hole.
No one has "seen a black hole" but evidence of where a black hole must be has been observed.
You don't go through a black hole, you go into a black hole. And with present day technology, yes, it would crush you to raw energy.
No. Nothing can pass through a black hole. Once something enters it can never leave.
no
No, based on our current understanding of physics, a spacecraft would not survive traveling through a black hole. The intense gravitational forces would stretch and compress the spacecraft to the point of destruction.
Yes. A black hole sucks everything that passes through its event horizon in, no exceptions. Nothing, not even light can escape a black hole.
Yes, energy can escape from a black hole through Hawking radiation, which is a process where black holes emit radiation and lose mass over time. However, the escape of energy through Hawking radiation is very slow and weak in comparison to the massive gravitational pull of the black hole.
Light travels through the hole in the black paper as the paper blocks the light's path except for the hole, allowing a beam of light to pass through. The beam of light will be more focused and directional due to the small size of the hole.