There is a black hole close to Earth, yes. It is 1,600 light years away.
Not really, but in a Galaxy next to the milky way there is alot of activity and possibly a black hole.
No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.
no
That seems likely, considering the large number of black holes and of planets in the Universe. However, I am not aware of any specific observation of a planet falling into a black hole, for example. On the other hand, the likelyhood of a black hole getting close to Earth, withint any reasonable amount of time, is very low.
No - at least no black holes as defined by physics.
Betelgeuse is a good candidate at only 430 light years from Earth is has sufficient mass to explode as a supernova and leave behind a black hole. It has been speculated that Betelgeuse will explode (in astronomical terms) fairly soon.
If Earth were to suddenly be swallowed by a black hole, the process would be quite rapid and catastrophic without any advance warning. However, it is currently considered highly unlikely that Earth could be consumed by a black hole due to the vast distances between our planet and any known black holes.
A black hole is an area in space-time, caused by the collapse of a massive star, where the gravity is so high that anything past a certain point -the event horizon- will never escape. Nothing, not even light. However, the energy and matter outside or near the event horizon of the black hole can get excited, or heated up, and released as beams of gamma rays and other radiation detectable from Earth. That's why we can determine that the singularity which is a black hole is "there", even though we can't see it (it's a black hole).
Black hole has very strong gravitional force thats why if any things near from this black hole swalled this
Our planet Earth will probably not spontaneously turn into a black hole under its own gravity since it lacks sufficient mass - it would need several solar masses to so collapse, and the Earth is just a tiny fraction of the mass of the Sun.
Then earth would be attract and eventually it will disappear.Because if we see it in a logical manner,a BLACKHOLE attracts any other body because of its strong gravitational force.Therefore our earth including our solar system and the other planets around it will eventually disappear.!
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.