Space and time becomes stretched (and twisted) near a black hole. This is known as "frame dragging".
No. Pluto is nowhere near massive enough to become a black hole.
The fourth dimension is time, and it does become warped near a black hole.
No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.No; I am not in a black hole yet.A black hole, like any other object with mass, will attract objects that are near by.
You can't - that's the whole idea of a black hole. Don't get near a black hole in the first place.
You get the shark to come near you and follow you to the black hole, then when you get to the black hole you turn a let the shark in. Have fun!
I don't know about a black hole near your tonsils but my inlaw had a black hole on the inside of his lip and his breath was pretty bad. It turned out to be cancer from poor fitting dentures
if you go close enough to a black hole you can get stretched to death the end
The fourth dimension is time. Since black holes have a strong gravitational pull, they are able to warp the fabric of space around them. As such, they also have an effect on time. As you approach a black hole, "frame dragging" occurs (which is the twisting of space and time), and the closer you get to the event horizon of the black hole this effect only intensifies. As such, the fourth dimension does become warped near a black hole.
A black hole is a collapsed star, like the sun, that is very small in size, but, the gravitation pull is so strong, that a person is ripped to shreds if they get near it. A black hole gets it's name from the fact that the gravitation pull is so strong not even light can be reflected from it. We can't see black holes, but, we can tell they are there by the effect they have on the objects near them. They are whirlpools in space, pulling objects into them. When we see a trail of objects being pulled into darkness, that's a black hole.
The speed of light is a constant, it does not matter in or out of a black hole.
Not really.
Nothing, unless a black hole comes very near to us. By the way, you shouldn't say "the" black hole, unless you make it clear which black hole you mean. There are many black holes.