There is no black hole on the planet Jupiter, but there is a red spot.
The mass of the black hole would increase in proportion to the mass of the planet
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
Jupiter could potentially orbit a black hole the size of Mars - one that size would have an immense(!) gravitational pull and would be significantly more massive than Jupiter. By comparison, the Sun's Schwarzschild radius is only about 3 km - and Mars has a radius around 3,400 km - so a black hole of that size would be in excess of a thousand times the mass of the Sun.
A black hole could potentially consume Jupiter if it entered the black hole's event horizon, the point of no return. However, the likelihood of Jupiter encountering a black hole and being sucked up is extremely low due to the vast distances between objects in space.
No. No planet is massive enough to become a black hole. A black hole is the remains of a dead, supermassive star.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
As the planet is approaching a black hole due to the immense gravitational pull on the objects surrounding it, the planet revolves around the black hole until it falls into the black hole.
A black hole is the stellar remains of a massive star.
There are no known planets in the vicinity of a black hole.
No. ther eis no black hole in our solar system. Black holes are a byproduct of the death of massive stars at least 10 times the mass of our sun. If there was a black hole between Mars and Jupiter all of the planets and even our Sun would revolve around the black hole. Since this is not the case there is no possible way a black hole could be within the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. There is however a large belt of asteroids between Mars and Jupiter.
Yes, a black hole can move a planet. Black holes are so massive that they can alter the orbits of stars and star systems. This makes changing planetary motion nothing to a black hole.
This is nothing to do with planets. It's part of the theory of black holes. Perhaps you mean if the planet's mass were concentrated into a black hole. In that case the answer is Jupiter, because it has the greatest mass.