a singularity
The center of a black hole is called a singularity, where a huge amount of matter is crushed into a single point. That's scary, isn't it?
At the center of a black hole is a mass that has collapsed to an infinitely dense point.
The strength of a black hole's gravity depends on the black hole's mass and how far your reference point is from the center of mass.
The center. just a theory its really hard to say things about a black hole because we know so little about them other than they are made from supernovas and have an intence gravitational pull and consume everything around it and its so dence not even light can escape it (thus the name black hole)
In the middle of a black hole, there is a single point of matter called a singularity. This is where space-time actually stops and nothing is beyond this point. Anything and everything that gets sucked up in the black hole goes here.
A black hole does not have a "bottom" in the traditional sense. Once an object is past the event horizon (the point of no return), it is inevitably pulled towards the singularity at the center of the black hole.
When an object enters a black hole, it starts being stretched. As it moves closer and closer to the center of the black hole, the gravitational pull on the part of the object that is closer to the center becomes more powerful than the gravitation pull on the part of the object that is farther away from the center. The objects keeps on getting stretched until it reaches the center of the black hole. We don't yet know what happens at that point.
A singularity is at the centre of a black hole.
Gravity is towards the center of the black hole. The event horizon is not what attracts objects - it is simply the "point of no return".
Once objects enter a black hole, they are pulled towards the center, called the singularity, where they are crushed into a point of infinite density. This is known as the "point of no return" as nothing, not even light, can escape the intense gravitational pull of a black hole.
Not all galaxies have a black hole at their center. Some galaxies, like our own Milky Way, do have a supermassive black hole at their center, while others do not.
No, the sun does not orbit a black hole in the center of our galaxy. The sun orbits around the center of the Milky Way galaxy, where there is a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A.