No one knows for sure, except that it will never be seen again.
If you enter a black hole, no matter what the speed, you will be sucked into the center of the black hole, and utterly destroyed.
Once objects enter a black hole, they are pulled towards the center, called the singularity, where they are crushed into a point of infinite density. This is known as the "point of no return" as nothing, not even light, can escape the intense gravitational pull of a black hole.
No
A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. A white hole, on the other hand, is a hypothetical region in space where matter and light can only escape from it and nothing can enter. In simple terms, a black hole pulls everything in, while a white hole pushes everything out.
No. A black hole cannot "pop." putting more material into a black hole only makes it stronger. That said, if too much material approaches a black hole at once not all of it can enter. The excess gets ejected at the black hole's poles in jets at nearly the speed of light.
I am not aware of light calculating anything in a black hole.
No, a black hole is not faster than light.
if there is light surrounding a black hole it is normally from material entering into the event horizon of the black hole.
Only around a black hole. There is a sphere around every black hole where light orbits the black hole.
light has no mass and therefore no weight. Light cannot be "pulled" into a black hole. The escape velocity from a black hole is greater than the speed of light, so no light can escape from a black hole. Spacetime in the vicinity of a black hole is greatly distorted by the hole's gravity, and light may travel along curved geodesics that intersect the black hole. But it is not pulled in.
Well first of all there is more than one black hole in our galaxy. Second there would be no point of putting a probe in a black hole because: 1) no light can enter past the event horizon (you might want to look that up) therefore you can not see what is actually inside a black hole. 2) our closest known black hole is 150 light years away. So no there is no probe in any black hole. I hope this was some help to you.
The escape velocity of a black hole is equal or greater than the speed of light, so light cannot escape