the more massive will swallow the smaller
There are four types of black holes. In size and physical construct.Size:Supermassive: These have a mass of between 105 -> 109 million Suns yet have a diameter of 0.001 -> 10 AU (an AU is approximately 150 million kilometers). It is believed that most, if not all galaxies have a supermassive black hole in their centre.Intermediate mass black hole. These have a mass of around 103 million Suns yet have a diameter of 103 kilometers (About the radius of Earth)Stellar-mass. These have a mass of about 10 million Suns but are only around 30 kilometers in diameter.Micro black hole. These have the mass of a million Moons but are tiny, up to 0.1 mm in diameter.Physical construct:Black holes with no electrical charge, and without rotationBlack holes with no electrical charge, and with rotationBlack holes with an electrical charge, and without rotationBlack holes with an electrical charge, and with rotation.See related links for more information
Black holes are generally categorized into three buckets - the largest being called supermassive, the 'medium' being associated with stellar evolution and called 'stellar mass' black holes, and the smallest or tiny ones called "microscopic" black holes.
No, black holes are not two-dimensional structures in space. They are three-dimensional regions of space where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from them.
Red super-giants form when stars of more than ten solar masses begin to burn their helium. Eventually such a star will burn all of possible fuels and go into gravitational collapse, resulting in a super-nova. If the mass left over from this collapse is large enough (a remnant of three to five solar masses), the remnant will collapse into a black hole.
A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that nothing - not even light - can escape. That's the definition of a black hole; it is also what distinguishes it from other objects.
Oh, what a wonderful question. Black holes are actually three-dimensional objects in space, much like any other object in the universe. They have mass, size, and can exert a powerful gravitational force. Keep exploring the mysteries of the cosmos, my friend, for there is such beauty and wonder to discover.
Black holes are formed by super massive stars when they collapse. Less massive stars will form neutron stars. Therefore, the original size and mass of the star will determine if a black hole will be created when the star collapses.
There is a force that unites the tides, planets and black holes. Tides are generally thought of as the rise and fall of the level of the oceans due to the gravitational effects of the moon and the sun. Planets have gravity proportional to their masses, and black holes are points of massive gravity. Gravity or its effects unite the three things listed.
The "no-hair" theorem states that black holes can be described by only three observable properties: mass, electric charge, and angular momentum. Any additional information about the matter that formed the black hole is said to be "lost" to the black hole, making them seem as though they have "no hair" or distinguishing features beyond these three characteristics.
The reference to "three holes in the ground" (and its response, "well, well, well") derives from ITCH's song Well, Well, Well, Three Holes In The Ground.
This is not a magical incantation; nothing happens.
You fight with them nothing special really happens