The event horizon of a black hole can only be 'seen' (as an absence of all radiation) from the outside. At the surface or below the surface of the event horizon, the universe outside would still be visible - but heavily distorted: light would be intensely blue-shifted, and shapes and constellations deform unrecognisably as a result of the relativistic distortion of light-rays.
Nobody knows what is inside a Black Hole, but since there is no gravity inside the event horizon, and energy density is extremely high, it must be more like a plasma.
Yes, but as a string of atoms erupting from the black hole like an explosion. Other than that, it is very unclear what happens inside a black hole.
black holes are like portals so they take u to other dimensions
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.
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
It would be easier to answer this if we knew what you meant by a "warp zone". If you mean something that warps you from one place to another like in a video game, then no. A black hole is an object, usually a dead star, that has completely crushed itself under the force of gravity into an infinitely dense singularity. Around the black hole space and time are severely distorted. At a certain radius, dependent on the black hole's mass, this distortion forms a sphere called an event horizon. Anything that falls through this surface will be trapped inside forever.
No, a black hole is not some sifi mysterious thing that causes unknown things to occur, like complete realities. It is simply a massive source of gravity, so massive that light cannot escape it.
It emits light so is not "black". A "black hole" is a stellar body so massive that nothing can escape its gravity. Light actually consists of a stream of photons, so a sufficiently massive body can prevent light escaping from its surface. The sun, like most stars, is not massive, or heavy, enough to be a "black hole".
We cannot see black holes because no light comes from them1. They are so gravitationally massive that even light cannot escape from a black hole, thus the name black hole.1 While there is an emission of matter and energy, called Hawking radiation, that theoretically radiates from the perimiter of a black hole, no energy of any kind (including Hawking radiation) escapes from inside the black hole.
Since light cannot escape a black hole it is essentially invisible. Just a literal black hole in space. Fortunately, due to the extreme gravity of the singularity, light is bent (Gravitational lensing) around the outskirts of a black hole which causes a visual distortion of light.Think of a piece of metal with a bullet hole. Around the hole the metal is warped, distorted and pressed inward. That is how you would see a black hole except it would be much more difficult to see. If a black hole eclipsed a star close enough, you would see a round black emptiness surrounded by light. The hole itself is absorbing every bit of light from the star but some light is orbiting *around* the black hole as it's being sucked in causing a kind of halo. This is essentially how we look for black holes.
Nope. The closest black hole is 1600 light years away - way too far for anyone to travel to. And even if someone did manage to get there, they wouldn't be able to come back if they went inside of a black hole: they would be stretched like a piece of spaghetti and killed.
You would die quickly, either before, or after, falling into the black hole, depending on the mass of the black hole.