When you are near the event horizon, you would be close to the speed of light - from your own point of view. From the point of view of an outside observer, you would move slower and slower, and never quite reach the event horizon. This has to do with the queer distortion of space and time caused by the black hole.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
Yes, everything can be sucked in to a black hole, even light
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.
It would get completely destroyed. the mass of the black hole would increase.
In that case, it will stay there.
black holes are a very complected mechanisms. Beyond the hole lies the centeral horizon point here is when the space forced in the black hole is draggedback to volcities the same as the speed of light which is 168282.4 miles per second when space gets sucked in at the start it gets sucked in faster than the speed of light.
When you are sucked into a black hole you'll get destroyed. The matter of your body will remain in the black hole.
Yes, everything can be sucked in to a black hole, even light
Everything that is slower than the speed of light (approximately 186,000 miles per second) gets sucked in. Since nothing is faster than the speed of light, magnetism can definitely be sucked in
If you enter a black hole, no matter what the speed, you will be sucked into the center of the black hole, and utterly destroyed.
No, if it had been sucked into a black hole, it wouldn't still be there shining in the night sky.
if you get to close
no you can not
Their is not more info about this because there are no evidences of humans being sucked into black hole but once sucked in, the object which has been sucked in will not be able to escape out from black hole's event horizon as a black hole very very very very very strong gravitational field. But some scientists say that object which went into the black hole comes out through a white hole (which is just the opposite of black holes in all aspects)
There are no black holes anywhere near Earth, so no we won't get sucked into one.
Stars do get sucked into a black hole if they pass the event horizon.
The material sucked in to a black hole becomes part of the black hole - that is, a black hole crushes matter to an nearly no size, at all.