If you mean the rate - some of the larger supermassive black holes engulf matter at the rate of over a thousand solar masses a year. However, they don't do this all the time; it seems that such a rate cannot be sustained in the long term.
it is gravity to the exteme, once something is close enogh it can't escape, it is like an endless pit never full
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.
A black hole near Neptune -- or near any other object in space -- would suck up that planet (or that object). Fortunately, there nearest black hole to our Solar System is several thousand light years away.
They can suck your little brain out of your nose...
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
If a black hole came close to our Earth, it would most definitely suck it in. But we wouldn't have much to worry about, since the x-rays radiating from the accretion disk surrounding a black hole would kill all life on our planet long before the black hole got here.
Yes, all black holes 'suck stuff up'.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
Things falling into a black hole are ripped apart by tidal force, become a stream of their constituent atoms. These atoms are further shredded by the time they reach the singularity, and the mass of what is sucked in is added to the mass of the black hole.
You would think very fast, since their gravity is so strong. However, the closer to a black hole something gets, the more warped is the spacetime. Time appears very slow near a black hole, so the question is does it take a really long time to suck summat up?
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.
A black hole doesn't "suck" things in. It pulls them in with it's immense gravity. In order to suck something in, there must be something to fill in empty space such as air.
yes... it can because a black hole can even suck light in :) lol hope it helped.................................. c it can suck in nearley everything
A black hole near Neptune -- or near any other object in space -- would suck up that planet (or that object). Fortunately, there nearest black hole to our Solar System is several thousand light years away.
no
As soon as It's born. The gravitational force of the Black Hole will pull matter into it.
yes, yes it can
Yes