Not exactly. The singularity is in the center of the black hole. Somewhat like a peach pit is in the center of the peach but it isn't the peach but part of it.
Yes
a lot of empty space and a point singularity at the exact center containing all the mass compressed to infinite density.
It sucks all matter within the event horizon. If one was created on Earth, the entire planet would be crushed to a singularity.
No, they are not the same. A singularity would be inside a black hole.
Otherwise known as a Black Hole
Technically there is no 'inside' to black holes. But the event horizon is the point at which you can no longer escape the gravitational pull of a black hole. Inside of the event horizon no body knows what there is. The truth is, a lot of things like this are all theory. But what you can expect to find at the very center is a singularity. A singularity is a point, just a point, with no height, length or width that has mass. A singularity is what 'powers' a black hole, it is what 'sucks' everything in.
The singularity is believed to have been created by the rapid expansion of the universe from a single point of infinite density and temperature, known as the Big Bang.
there is two syllables in thw word blackhole
The initial singularity, which is believed to be the starting point of the universe, was created by a rapid expansion of energy and matter. This event is known as the Big Bang.
A singularity is a theoretical point in the center of a black hole where matter is infinitely dense and gravitational forces are infinitely strong. It is considered a point of zero size, as all known physical laws break down at the singularity.
The Milky Way contains a supergiant blackhole at its center.
In the galaxy m87 at the center of the constellation Virgo, is a super massive blackhole of 3 billion solar masses and a diameter of 11 billion miles.And that is in the known universe.Another's view: There is a blackhole of 18 billion solar masses in the quasar OJ 287 and it is (approximately) 3.5 billion light years away.