The two parts of a black hole are the event horizon and the singularity. The event horizon is the "surface" of the black hole, and is imaginary. The event horizon's appearance is caused by the bending of light. The singularity is a point of space where everything that gets sucked in is crushed to about the size of an atom.
You would have a black hole the size of the combined mass of the two black holes.
Define a "hyper black hole". A "Hyper Black Hole" is a massive "Black hole" thought to be created by many Black holes merging together. Theological Physics now believe that most galaxies, including our own Milky Way, have a "Hyper Black Hole" in the center
This question can be answered differently deending on the part of the black hole that you are talking about and some parts will change based on the mass of the star that made it. Basically the black hole can be separated into two parts: the singularity and the event horizon. The event horizon is the area of the black hole in which nothing, not even light or time, can escape. The event horizon is a gravitational boundary and its size depends on the mass of the black hole. The singularity is the only part that actually exists as matter and it is often though of as having a volume of zero unless you are reffering to quantum mechanics in which it has a volume smaller than the volume of an atomic nucleus.
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.
No. A black hole will remain a black hole. A neutron star is a remnant of a star not massive enough to become a black hole.
The black hole would be the vagina, and the wrinkly piece of skin around it is the women.
You would have a black hole the size of the combined mass of the two black holes.
Black hole
If you go into a black hole you will be stretch out into two and then you will be crushed.
A vacuum and a black hole are two very different things.
It is scientifically impossible to have a black hole in any parts of the Earth. If there was one, means that the tiny black hole would suck up everything, even time and even the moon.
The two black holes will merge to form a single, larger black hole with a mass equal to the combined masses of the original two.
both of the black hole will join together as one big black hole. they can either have a direct hit or both spin, twirling into each other until it create a new super big black hole.
When two black holes get close enough together, they might merge, to form a larger black hole.
A black hole can't really form inside of another black hole. If you think of a black hole forming after a star goes supernova, then there isn't really a star to go supernove inside of the already created black hole. In fact, there isn't even any space inside of the blak hole for anything to happen. Two black holes can join together, but they wil eventually go to one.
The collapses star gets squeezed by collapses gas and turns into a black hole.
A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.A Schwarzschild black hole is a non-rotating black hole. The Kerr black hole is a rotating black hole. Since the latter is more complicated to describe, it was developed much later.