No. The only force at work with a black hole is gravity.
There is no such concept of a negative black hole outside the fictional computer game involving Sentry Catapult.
A black hole can have a positive charge, negative charge, or no charge. It all depends on the charges of the material that fall into it.
Black Holes don't have any kind of atmosphere but in pressure wise, Black Holes have infinite pressure because nothing, including light could get of the gravitation force of an black hole.
the gravitational field of a black hole is so vast that even light can't escape form it and in the case of a ghost, I think ghosts are kind of negative energy , so when a ghost goes near to the black hole then deadman will die again
A black hole forms only when the star is large enough that the gravitational pressure exceeds the quantum degeneracy pressure.
There is no such concept of a negative black hole outside the fictional computer game involving Sentry Catapult.
A black hole can have a positive charge, negative charge, or no charge. It all depends on the charges of the material that fall into it.
Black Holes don't have any kind of atmosphere but in pressure wise, Black Holes have infinite pressure because nothing, including light could get of the gravitation force of an black hole.
no because it would destroy the space if it went in to a black hole
The term black hole is a misnomer that implies the notion of a hole; there is no hole, so there is no end (or exit). A black hole is a spherical volume of immense density. Somewhat like the Earth, everything within its gravitational field is attracted to its essense. And just as pressure increases towards the center of Earth, the pressure increases on a more more dramatic scale towards the center of a black hole. However since the subsistence of a black hole is unknown, it might be said that the black hole ends in energy transformation.
The law of gravity.
the gravitational field of a black hole is so vast that even light can't escape form it and in the case of a ghost, I think ghosts are kind of negative energy , so when a ghost goes near to the black hole then deadman will die again
A black hole forms only when the star is large enough that the gravitational pressure exceeds the quantum degeneracy pressure.
That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.That depends exactly how you interpret the term "strong". In its vicinity, the black hole distorts space more than anything that is NOT a black hole; so much that nothing can get out of the black hole. But at some standard distance, a galaxy, for example, would have more gravitational attraction than a black hole, simply because it has more mass. At least, so far no black hole of the mass of an entire galaxy has been found.
A black hole can be located due to its gravitational attraction. If matter falls into the black hole, it will emit x-rays; also, even if this is not the case, the black hole can be detected by the gravitation it exerts on nearby objects - for example, if an object orbits the black hole. A black hole may also change the direction of light emitted from behind it, for example, from a far-away star or galaxy. This is known as "gravitational lensing".
No. A black hole intakes matter. After it is broken down by gravity. Then it releases it as particles (Neutrinos for example) There is not another universe within a black hole. Nor do stars or matter stay within the black hole. Of course all of this is theory with some really fun math attached to it.
"Black hole", not "black whole". The reason massive stars turn into a black hole is because, once they run out of fuel (and no longer have the radiation pressure to keep them blown up), there is no force that can stop the gravitational collapse.