No. Anything you put into a black hole simply gets added to its mass.
The milky way contains about a dozen black holes in the milky way.
Let's put it this way... All larger galaxies have huge black holes in their center. In addition to that, you can expect any galaxy to have a significant number of stellar black holes.
There are no known black holes near Saturn. The nearest known black holes are much further away in our galaxy. Saturn does have its own moons and rings, but black holes are not typically found in such close proximity to planets.
Black holes are common in most galaxies. It is not odd that there would be a black hole in the middle of the Milky Way.
Easy way to get rid of it.
No.
Black Holes are scattered throughout the cosmos. It is theorised that there are supermassive black holes at the centre of galaxies such as ours (The Milky Way).
They get their names from the way that they look.
Black holes do not emit light, so black holes can not be seen this way. But black holes emit X-rays, but stars are not hot enough to emit X-rays. When black holes suck up stars, energy goes to the black hole, and come out as X-rays.
Not all galaxies have black holes in their centers, but many large galaxies, including our own Milky Way, are believed to have supermassive black holes at their centers.
You can't use spectrometers to detect black holes. Telescopes are the only way to detect them.
you can't get rid of the holes. They are your pores. The pores are very impotant. A pore is what gets clogged with dirt and other chemicals when you get a pimple.