If you mean "Black Holes" then they are formed when a star very many times bigger than the sun goes supernova and collapses in on itself.
in dark holes
Black holes are not made up of dark matter. Dark matter is a mysterious substance that makes up a large portion of the universe's mass, but black holes are formed from the collapse of massive stars.
There are no black holes but there are dark areas known as Sun spots.
The Dark Side
Thankfully there are none.
No. And the term is "black hole," not "dark hole."
Dark matter and black holes are both mysterious components of the universe, but they are not directly related. Dark matter is an invisible substance that makes up a large portion of the universe's mass, while black holes are extremely dense regions in space where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. While dark matter may influence the formation and behavior of black holes, they are fundamentally different phenomena in the cosmos.
Yes. - End of Line -
It was to dark to to see
No. Black holes do not give off anything other than small amounts of Hawking radiation. That note aside, scientists do not know what dark matter is or what its origin is.
Pollution causes global warming. It then causes ozone depletion.
tiny air pockets popiies