There was one about 10:30 last night, right after the news.
None has been discovered today, but it's still early.
They are in almost every galaxy in our universe and there are an estimated 100 billion galaxies.
millions of black holes are in all of the galaxies, and in the center of all large galaxies is an enormous black hole that makes all the stars go around it. the power was a million times greater 350 years ago. this cycle will repeat over again. Scientists have come to believe that there is very probably a supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way, and that there may be supermassive black holes at the centers of many galaxies.
Black holes are a bit hard to detect, so I am pretty sure that not all black holes in this galaxy are known - and I suspect there is not even a decent estimate. But you can expect there to be several.
That's the current best guess; the formation of extremely powerful black holes in the centers of many galaxies. It's possible that when the central black hole in the Milky Way was forming, our own galaxy might have shined like a quasar. This may be why we never see any aliens in space; any civilization that existed then might have been exterminated by the radiation released when the central black hole formed. Earth's biosphere formed after that, and we might be one of the first spacefaring species since.
Almost every galaxy has a super massive black hole in its centre and this fact is widely accepted now days . Milky way galaxy also have a super massive black hole of its own, weighing more than 4 million times more than our sun's mass. Andromeda galaxy is our nearest neighbour having a super massive black hole in its centre weighing 114 million solar masses .
Black holes can technically be any where. Some scientists believe that there is a black hole in the center of our galaxy along with many other galaxies. Because black holes are so difficult to detect, they can be very dangerous.
Probably only one - at the centre.
All galaxies have supermassive black holes in their centers.
Yes, black holes are known and regarded by many scientists, astronomers, and physicists.
Yes, probably many of them. We believe that there is a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy; that there are probably similar suoermassive black holes at the centers of many large galaxies.
stellar, supermassive, miniature
millions of black holes are in all of the galaxies, and in the center of all large galaxies is an enormous black hole that makes all the stars go around it. the power was a million times greater 350 years ago. this cycle will repeat over again. Scientists have come to believe that there is very probably a supermassive black hole in the center of the Milky Way, and that there may be supermassive black holes at the centers of many galaxies.
Our galaxy contains a supermassive black hole at the center and probably several million stellar mass black holes scattered throughout.
Probably yes, although we cannot be certain. The gas and dust clouds prevent us from seeing the center. Scientists believe that there may be a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, as there appear to be supermassive black holes at the centers of many large galaxies.
It is not known how many black holes exist. One of the main reasons is that, if matter is not actually falling into the black hole, it is impossible to detect.
Unknown - As they can't easily be detected, and most of them are expected to have been formed upon the onset of the Big Bang. Astronomers estimate that in our region of the Universe, there are some 100 billion supermassive black holes. But this does not account for the lesser size black holes, of which there is estimate to be a much larger number.
Probably the supermassive black holes that are believed to be at the centers of many (perhaps most) large galaxies. These may be related to quasars.
Aside from involvement with theoretical work, yes there is an ongoing practical influence: black holes appear to be the underpinning for many if not most galaxies, thought to have a supermassive black hole in their center and thus dictating their revolution, density, general morphology, and other factors. There is a favorable zone of distance from the galactic nucleus (similar to the favorable distance of Earth from our Sun); in that sense the gravitational pull from our own supermassive black hole could be construed as influential on our survival.