A black hole is not a hole, it is a sphere. The ultra-dense collapsed core of a now dead star.
It exists in three physical dimensions, like all objects in the universe.
It exists in space-time, like all objects in the universe.
Black holes do not "suck everything in." The normal laws of gravity still apply to it. You can measure its mass. If you are any random distance away from its center, there is a specific velocity you can travel perpendicular to that black hole, to maintain a stable orbit.
The difference between a black hole, and everything else is, it is so dense, that if you get close enough to it, the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light. Nothing can orbit or escape it at that distance, no matter how fast you travel.
2D-area 3D-Volume
2d is incorrect
2d is invalid. Only s and p orbitals in 2nd energy level
According to SCL Direct website a 28 watt 2D lamp has an initial lumens output of 2050.
Meters cubes are a unit of volume, meters squared is a unit of area. They are different things, so you can't convert between them.You can not, a 2 dimensional object can not become a 3 dimensional object via conversion as the 2d object has no depth by witch to convert to.
Many theories have come into existence. The recent one is the hyperspace which states that our universe is like a 3D event horizon of a 4D black hole. So the 3D black holes in our universe there are 2D event horizons consisting of 2D universes. Now a black hole is a hole in the fabric of space-time. So actually it is the last stage itself. Its like the hole in a bathtub or the sink from where all the contents escape to somewhere else.
2d is 2 dimensional, or a flat object.
Well, a 2D object has only length and width, but a 3D object has length, width, and depth.
a 2D object is is flat and on the other hand a 3D object is bulgy
They are quadrilaterals which are 4 sided 2d shaped polygons
Only a rectangle.
yaa, you need to master how the formation of a 2D object, then it is very easy to form a 2D object into 3D shapes
A cylinder is not a 2D object because it has three dimensions - length, width, and height. It has a circular base and a curved surface, which give it depth. A 2D object would only have two dimensions and would lack any depth or thickness.
No. :'(
look at the sun with luigi ground pound that 2d black button to unlock
Your question reflects above average observation and thinking. It's the latter. Coming up with a 2D representation of a 3D object can be a challenge, and because (probably) the folks doing the effects are almost all doing it for dramatic effect, the end product is something that is quite a bit removed from what the "real object" would look like.
Decogon * * * * * A decagon, actually.