Canis Major is a constellation, therefore there is no centre.
Yes. VY Canis Majoris is about 4 billion kilometers across. This is comparable to the diameter of the event horizon of a 1.3 billion solar mass black hole. Black holes much larger than this have been detected in the centers of distant galaxies.
There is no black hole in our solar system.It is believed, however, that there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, and that there are black holes at the center of every galaxy.
At the center of a black hole is a mass that has collapsed to an infinitely dense point.
The center of a black hole, a locus of infinite density where matter is compressed into zero volume, is called a 'singularity.'
The center of a black hole is called a singularity, where a huge amount of matter is crushed into a single point. That's scary, isn't it?
Perhaps you are referring to quasars. Quasars are (galaxies with) extremely active galactic nuclei.Otherwise, as far as we know, many of the larger galaxies seem to contain a supermassive black hole in the center. If by black hole you are referring to standard black hole, not a supermassive, chances are all galaxies have quite a few. Within the local group of galaxies (Our cluster), the brightest galaxy as it appears from Earth is the Canis Major dwarf galaxy at 25,000 lightyears away. For galaxies not within our cluster, the brightest would be Markarian 231 at about 600,000,000 lightyears away.Comparing apparent magnitude. Canis Major's apparent magnitude (Little "m") is approximately 23.3m where Markarian 231 is about 13.8m yet the galaxy is 2,400,000% further away than Canis Major. An interesting side note about this galaxy is that it's supermassive blackhole is accompanied by a large quasar.
When the canis majoris explodes, it will create a supernova of over 30000 degrees. A supernova is a huge explosion of fire. After the supernova, a black hole will form. Black holes form when a star explodes. But it cant just be a star. It has to be a star 10x greater then our sun. The canis majoris is way bigger then just 10x. So when it explodes it will create a black hole much bigger then normal size.
Yes. VY Canis Majoris is about 4 billion kilometers across. This is comparable to the diameter of the event horizon of a 1.3 billion solar mass black hole. Black holes much larger than this have been detected in the centers of distant galaxies.
A singularity is at the centre of a black hole.
There is no black hole in our solar system.It is believed, however, that there is a black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, and that there are black holes at the center of every galaxy.
It seems that just about EVERY galaxy has a huge ("supermassive") black hole in its center.
every galaxy got a black hole in the center even our galaxy, the milky way.
It is believed that all galaxies have a black hole at their centers.
singularity
A blazar is an elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole at the center.
Yes it is possible for Canis magoris to become a black hole, but at its current age it may either explode and turn into a dwarf star or implode and become a black hole. The process will take millions of year, but the possibility is there. But for a definite answer that is impossible at the current status of data. Their are just too many factors that could come into play.
At the center of a black hole is a mass that has collapsed to an infinitely dense point.