A supermassive black hole is a huge black hole, usually in the center of a galaxy. All or most galaxies are expected to have such supermassive black holes. Such a galactic black hole typically has over a million times the mass of our Sun; the largest (in large galaxies) have billions of times the mass of our Sun. The black hole in the center of our own galaxy (the Milky Way) is associated with the object Sagittarius A*, and it has a mass estimated at 4 million solar masses.
Muse
supermassive blackhole
Yes. The mass inside the black hole is about 4 million times that of the sun.
Guitar, bass, drums, and a shaker (... or some similar form of percussion instrument). The guitar and bass have effects on them.
Yes. You see, a supermassive blackhole constantly eats away at the galaxy it inhabits. but for clusters the gravitational field is so immense, it already is pulling whole galaxies into its singularity. An example could be that our galaxy, as well as others are being pulled to a phenomenon known as The Great Attraction which could very well be a supermassive black hole.
The largest known SuperMassive Black hole (as of 2011) is located in OJ 287 with a mass of 18 Billion Solar Masses! That is 6 times larger then it's nearest competitor.
The song played in the baseball scene in twilight is called Supermassive black hole by Muse. Try these: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsp3_a-http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsp3_a-PMTw and if they dont work you can listen to it on utube just type in supermassive black hole by muse . TAAADDDAAAAA!
there is two syllables in thw word blackhole
The Milky Way contains a supergiant blackhole at its center.
no
You cannot see a Blackhole with the naked eye and they're hard to detect anyway. No one would see a Blackhole pull anything into its center.
There is a supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, and perhaps most other galaxies. Additionally, there are several smaller black holes relatively near by, as cosmic distances go. The first black hole ever detected is in the constellation Cygnus, called "Cygnus X-1".