Since whit holes only exist mathematically, a black hole could not pull in a white hole.
Yes, it is possible for a black hole to capture another one and "swallow" it.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
No, black holes are actually invisible because it can suck it Light as well, so no light can escape from the black hole.
that is possible if they bare extremely small because a black hole would suck up or absorbe the earth before we knew it. No. That's wrong. It isn't possible because a black hole is caused when a star dies. And it isn't possible to have stars on Earth.
It is scientifically impossible to have a black hole in any parts of the Earth. If there was one, means that the tiny black hole would suck up everything, even time and even the moon.
More than possible - if a star and it's planets are too close, they all become mush!
A black hole doesn't "suck" things in. It pulls them in with it's immense gravity. In order to suck something in, there must be something to fill in empty space such as air.
yes... it can because a black hole can even suck light in :) lol hope it helped.................................. c it can suck in nearley everything
White holes are theoretical regions of spacetime that expel matter and energy outward, the opposite of black holes which pull matter in. They do not suck up objects like black holes do. However, there is no observational evidence for the existence of white holes in the universe.
no
No - In fact, the hypothetical concept of a wormhole is the pairing of black hole with a white hole to create a "shortcut" (tube or tunnel) through SpaceTime. Also known as an Einstein-Rosen Bridge, a wormhole is a hypothetical topological feature of SpaceTime, which, if it were even possible, would be too unstable to be maintained. Therefore a wormhole would not be "suck up" by a black hole, because the wormhole is an extension of a black hole. Rather wormholes would independently destabilize and evaporate, allowing the black hole to continue on into existence.