Though two are utterly unrelated, the similarity is that black holes can eclipse, just like our sun and moon.
When two or more black holes end up in an eclipse, they form together to create what is called a "supermassive black hole". This is an extremely rare occurrence.
The last eclipse of two black holes was observed by a pace probe called Chandra in a galaxy called "NGC 1365", which is 60 million light years away, in 2007.
An article from the official NASA website about the black hole eclipse is in the links below.
There is no proven connection between the Bermuda Triangle and black holes.
The things that we observe as quasars are believed to be caused by huge black holes.
The existence of black holes is an outgrowth or prediction of General Relativity, which was Einstein's theory of gravitation. The dominant force forming black holes is the force of gravity, a universal attraction between mass.
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Why am *I* safe from black holes? Because the nearest one from my planet is 1600 light years away. I don't know if that means YOU are safe from black holes -- I don't know the distance between your planet and the nearest black hole -- but I know my safety is assured.
stellar black holes were stars (these are large)primordial black holes were pieces of the big bang (these are microscopic)
This is impossible to answer with today's technology. Sorry
No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.
An intermediate-mass black hole is one with a mass significantly greater than the typical stellar-mass black holes, but less than the supermassive black holes such as are found at galactic centers. Their identification remains difficult, and their origins remain in the realm of speculation, although a reasonable theory hints at the likelihood of their formation from accretion of dense stellar clusters... and one possibly is that they are primordial black holes left over from the creation of the universe.
Black holes do not die but they can evaporate.
They don't. The attractive force between two objects is due to gravity. Black holes behave exactly like any other mass in this respect.
One of the considerations for the eventual termination of the universe is that all matter will be pulled into black holes, and then these black holes would eventually evaporate.