There's no mass range that's between "collapses into a neutron star or pulsar" and "collapses into a black hole". It'll be one or the other.
No, black holes cannot turn into neutron stars. Neutron stars form from the remnants of supernova explosions of massive stars, while black holes are formed from the gravitational collapse of massive stars. Once a black hole is formed, it will remain a black hole and will not transform into a neutron star.
It is sucked into the black hole to a point that is infinitely small.
You can't just destroy it - it would take a huge amount of energy to tear it apart. About the only way I can think of to "destroy" it - in away - is that it collides with a black hole, and the mass of the neutron star becoming part of the black hole - or the neutron star itself becoming a black hole, if its mass increases (due to additional mass falling into the neutron star).
A black hole or a neutron star.
You can't just destroy it - it would take a huge amount of energy to tear it apart. About the only way I can think of to "destroy" it - in away - is that it collides with a black hole, and the mass of the neutron star becoming part of the black hole - or the neutron star itself becoming a black hole, if its mass increases (due to additional mass falling into the neutron star).
A black hole has more mass than a neutron star, but if you are comparing volume it would depend on the mass of the black hole. A neutron star is estimated to be about 14 miles in diameter, which is larger than the event horizon of a black hole up to about 3.8 times the mass of the sun. A more massive black hole will be larger.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
It will probably explode as a supernova, leaving either a neutron star or black hole.
i believe the black hole crushes the object into another small black hole which just ads to the already infinate space within
When it turns into a black dwarf neutron star or black hole.
about 1/3 of a neutron star
after a neutron star collapses on itself