There isn't one. It depends on how much matter the collapsed star (black hole) has gathered.
No.
Depends!!!A white dwarf created from a star the same size as our Sun will only be the size of our Earth.A supermassive black hole can have a diameter of 150 million kilometers (Same distance from the Earth to the Sun).However a stellar black hole can only be 30 kilometers in diameter.There is no minimum size for a black hole, so one "could" be as small as 0.1mm
maximum size is 512 bytes without header
The maximum size hole that a cat can fit through is typically about the size of its head, which is around 3.5 inches in diameter.
4GB, minimum size is 256mb.
4
A black hole's size is determined by its mass, which is the amount of matter it contains. The more mass a black hole has, the larger its size. The size of a black hole is typically measured by its event horizon, which is the point of no return where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. The event horizon's size is directly related to the mass of the black hole.
The minimum size of an ICMP packet is 8 bytes, which includes the 8-byte ICMP header without any additional data. The maximum size of an ICMP packet is 65,535 bytes, which includes the maximum payload that can be carried within an IPv4 packet.
Any matter that enters the black hole will be destroyed. Also, it will increase the black hole's size.
A black hole can definitely get to the size of a planet. The width of the largest known supermassive black hole is thought to be over ten times the size of the entire orbit of Neptune around our Sun.
There is no maximum size provided it conforms to all other standards. The minimum size is not less than 1.680 inches diamiater
No. The maximum minus the minimum is the range. The mean is the sum of all elements of the list divided by the size of the list.