Scientists have not yet figured that out. They are trying to figure out where the matter that gets sucked into the black hole goes, which as I would imagine is what is on the other side of a black hole. Watch the news and you may be able to find out quicker than someone updating this question.
Well, there is a theory that on the other side of a Black hole is a White hole. As you know Black holes suck in anything that gets near it. Not even light can escape. So the question is where does it all go? That is where the white hole comes into play. It is believed that a white whole does the opposite of a black hole, it shoots everything out that a black hole sucks in. As explained in Newton's Third Law of Motion, "For Every Action There is an Equal and Opposite Reaction."
We have no idea, but according to the basic math of relativity, nothing. It's a hole that drops to infinity. For creatures living in 5 dimensions, it may be a like a 2 dimensional hole for us, have a beginning and en end, but here in the space with 4 dimensions, it has no end. Under certain conditions it has been theorized (highly theoretical) that the hole here has a exit somewhere else in our universe, but the basic math makes no predictions about this.
There IS no other side! Black holes suck in everything and crush it into subatomic particles. Things can orbit a black hole, but get to close to a boundary called the "Event Horizon," and it will be stretched like spaghetti, then ripped into subatomic particles, in other words: "ripped" out of existence. Fortunately, the likeliness of Earth falling into a black hole is (don't have a number, but I say) 1.0, ESPECIALLY while life is on Earth. But some people fear that CERN will accidental create a black hole, but that is even MORE unlikely. So don't worry. I might have answered more than you need, but here.
Who knows.
At the moment, that is beyond the boundaries of our knowledge.
We are only just beginning to understand black holes, let alone alternative universes.
There probably is no such thing as the "middle of the Universe".
A Black Hole looks the same from all angles.
A black hole isn't a hole as such. It is an extremely dense dead star that attracts all matter into a tiny singularity that has a massive density.
According to some Astro Physicist and Mathematicians, when we'd be able to get through Black hole their is one another Scenerio so called The Wormhole.
No. But there is considerable evidence to support the theory that there is a black hole
at the center of many galaxies, including the Milky Way.
No. Since the black hole is a part of the universe it would be physically and logically impossible to suck itself into itself.
Perhaps you are confusing Universe with galaxy. Most galaxies have a black hole in their center. The Universe has no such thing as a center.
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
You click on a planet,star,etc. scroll down and click Black Hole
Considering the other oddity's in the Universe; Neutron stars, pulsars, Wolf Rayet stars, magnetar or even hypernovas, I don't think black holes are that odd.
No. Since the black hole is a part of the universe it would be physically and logically impossible to suck itself into itself.
Um it just does
According to modern physics, science, and technological advances, there is no evidence that a black hole has the ability to do so.
There are already black holes within the universe
a black hole sport, a black hole.
Perhaps you are confusing Universe with galaxy. Most galaxies have a black hole in their center. The Universe has no such thing as a center.
no there is not once you enter a black hole you are crushed but your matter can be possibly shot out as radiation but other than that no there is no other universe or dimension based on my research
No, the universe is mostly a vacuum but a black hole is (theoretically) when gravity goes wild and rips a hole in space and time
Well if it DOES happen and a black hole DOES destroy the Universe, then we won't be around to worry about it.
Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.
The universe likely contains millions upon millions of black holes.
It is a possibility that the Universe resulted from a black hole, and that black holes in our own Universe result in new universes. But all this is extremely speculative.