The Milky Way contains a supergiant blackhole at its center.
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.
Kansas is the orphan of states. It is neither West nor Midwest. It is a blackhole in the center of our country.
In the galaxy m87 at the center of the constellation Virgo, is a super massive blackhole of 3 billion solar masses and a diameter of 11 billion miles.And that is in the known universe.Another's view: There is a blackhole of 18 billion solar masses in the quasar OJ 287 and it is (approximately) 3.5 billion light years away.
a lot of empty space and a point singularity at the exact center containing all the mass compressed to infinite density.
there is two syllables in thw word blackhole
Not exactly. The singularity is in the center of the black hole. Somewhat like a peach pit is in the center of the peach but it isn't the peach but part of it.
no
There are many black holes in the universe, and they are generally in the very center of a galaxy. Our Galaxy, the Milky Way, has one big black hole in the centre of it.
no
There are many ways.Plot the existence of any blackhole prior to travelMonitor gravitational influences in flight.Observe blackhole characteristics.In reality, a blackhole is not that much of a problem in spaceflight. All the other detritus is!!
the theory says in the center of each galaxy there must be a blackhole with an incredibly dense mass concentrated in a very small space. We can't "see" them because light that is entering a blackhole simply "stops" making it impossible to see what's inside because the outside is covered by the light that got trapped.