No black hole has "eaten" Pluto.
No. Pluto is nowhere near massive enough to become a black hole.
No, Pluto has not been sucked up by a black hole. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, while black holes are distant cosmic phenomena with intense gravitational pull. Pluto orbits the Sun and is not at risk of being sucked up by a black hole.
Pluto has not become a black hole. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, while black holes are objects formed from the remnants of massive stars that have collapsed under their own gravity.
About as far as Earth or the Sun is.
False. Nothing actually happened to Pluto itself. All that has happened is that, after discovering several new Pluto-like objects, scentists came up with a new definition for a planet that excluded Pluto.
It will get crushed and compressed into an infinitesimally small size.
No it is not.This myth is commonly believed but untrue.Pluto is a dwarf planet.
Observations of the largest known star, currently UY Scuti, indicate it has no companion; so it is almost certainly not being eaten by a black hole, so to speak.
They took it down because it was inappropriate
Some stars, comets, stardust, moons, planets, have been "eaten" by a black hole. None know for sure how many of each.
A black hole
It is actually difficult to determine the distance to black holes, but a nearby object believed to be a black hole from observations of strong X-ray emission is Cygnus X-1, located about 8000 light years away. Cyg X-1 is an ordinary star that is believed to be orbiting a black hole.