While nothing can escape from within the event horizon of a black hole, matter that has not yet passed that point of no return still has a chance. When a large amount of matter falls into a black hole, there is not enough room for all of it to reach the event horizon. What doesn't fall into the event horizon gets ejected in two jets of subatomic particles traveling at almost the speed of light.
Even though black holes suck through parts of the universe, the universe is inevitably big, and growing so as the universe is being sucked into another dimension by black holes, it is also expanding.
Black holes have been detected (or at least evidence of their activity) White holes have never been observed, and remain theoretical for the time being.
They use X-Rays from the stars being sucked into them.
no, that would say that mass would be expelled from the black hole witch is theoretically impossible, but particles smaller then atoms appear and disappear in and out of existence(this is theoretical) when they touch their polar opposite, think polar opposites, but sometimes a black hole will take one of them and what is left is this free floating particle called hawking radiation.
Black holes do not die but they can evaporate.
Even though black holes suck through parts of the universe, the universe is inevitably big, and growing so as the universe is being sucked into another dimension by black holes, it is also expanding.
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.
It depends, Black holes can go from being microscopic to supermassive black holes that entire galaxies revolve around. It all depends on which black hole and which quasar.
Black holes have been detected (or at least evidence of their activity) White holes have never been observed, and remain theoretical for the time being.
stellar black holes were stars (these are large)primordial black holes were pieces of the big bang (these are microscopic)
They use X-Rays from the stars being sucked into them.
no, that would say that mass would be expelled from the black hole witch is theoretically impossible, but particles smaller then atoms appear and disappear in and out of existence(this is theoretical) when they touch their polar opposite, think polar opposites, but sometimes a black hole will take one of them and what is left is this free floating particle called hawking radiation.
No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.No. It certainly has black holes, but it has other things as well.
it is theorized that it is possible for black holes to act as worm holes but most scientists believe their gravitational pull is simply too powerful for anything to survive being ripped to pieces before it goes anywhere.
Black holes do not die but they can evaporate.
Black holes are round because they are formed from dead stars and white holes. As you can guess a star is a sphere and that is why black holes are round.
In theory it is compressed down into a singularity. This is why black holes are the densest objects in the universe. All that mass is being squeezed down into a single point in space.