No. There is no such thing as a "white hole" in space. A black hole is a massive dent in space and time that has a massive gravitational pull. What is on the other side is really unknown, but the temperature is very hot, hotter than the sun in fact, so nothing could really survive to tell the story.
Actually one interpretation of the big bang is as a white hole, the inverse of a black hole.
Our Sun is not nearly massive enough to become a black hole, or even a neutron star. Our Sun will end its life as a white dwarf.
Since whit holes only exist mathematically, a black hole could not pull in a white hole.
There is a theory that tells that when you fall in a black hole, you are not destroyed but you are "teleported" to a white hole. The wormhole is a inter-dimensional tunnel that connects a black hole to a white hole.
The concept of a white hole only appears as part of the vacuum solution to Einstein's field equations that are used to describe a Schwarzschild wormhole, which is a black hole on one end, drawing in matter, and a white hole on the other to emit matter.They are unstable.
a black hole is caused by a supernova, then the black hole forms. the matter sucked in and gets shot through a worm hole. after the wormhole the matter gets shot out a white hole. the wormhole is impossible to see, for witch this hard to belive for it goes from one end of the galixy to the other endhope i helped!
No. Only the most massive stars form black holes. When the sun dies it will form a white dwarf.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
No. Once something enters a black hole it is trapped forever.
you have to go to space and find one and get sucked into the black hole
Theoretically, a black hole can destroy anything.
A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. A white hole, on the other hand, is a hypothetical region in space where matter and light can only escape from it and nothing can enter. In simple terms, a black hole pulls everything in, while a white hole pushes everything out.