I'm not sure what you mean, but in luminescence, the crab nebula trumps black holes infinitely. However, if the two met, the black hole would still be around the next day.
Nebula. according to nasa.
A black hole becomes stronger as it increases in mass, which results in greater gravitational pull. When matter falls into a black hole, it adds to its mass, making it "stronger" in terms of its gravitational influence on surrounding objects.
Gravity is stronger in a black hole, if that's what you mean. It's in a black hole that space and time are distorted to such an extent that not even light can escape.
Yes, a nebula is a vast cloud of gas and dust in space where stars are born, while a black hole is a region in space where the gravitational pull is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. They are very different astronomical phenomena.
Stars, nebula, and a super-massive black hole at it's center.
No. When matter falls into a black hole it simply increases the black hole's mass, giving it stronger gravity and a larger event horizon.
Yes, but it can also make a black hole or a white dwarf.
When a nebula collapses under the right conditions it forms a star. Larger stars end their life-cycle as black holes. For more information try searching for "stellar evolution."
They explode as a supernova/hypernova to form a planetary nebula/black hole.
Yes, they do. This is called a nova or supernova, depending on its mass. The supernova outshines every star you can see usually depending on the distance. If a star is big enough, the supernova can create a black hole in space. The crab nebula was formed by a supernovas about 1,000 years ago.
3 outcomes. 1: Black Hole 2: Neutron Star 3: Nebula
Because the bug nebula's (NGC 6302) central star, a white dwarf, is only about two thirds solar mass, it is unlikely to become a black hole. It would need to be about five times its current mass to overcome degeneracy pressure.