A dead star. The dead star's smashed atoms come together, and are crushed again. This births a black hole
Because its black and its a hole.......
First, it isn't the "weight", but the mass of the black hole that is relevant. Second, the black hole does, indeed, greatly distort space and time in its neighborhood.
No.
No. A black hole may be the remnant of the core of what was once a blue star, but the black hole itself is as black as anything can possibly be.
Dude it is black for a reason. You can not see the black hole itself, but you can see the black hole distorting light, eating stars, or it's gravitational pull.
we can notice by the effect it causes on the nearby stars. A star which is near a black hole revolves around it and when it is closer to a black hole ,it revolvles faster and it revolves slower when it is farther away from a black hole.Secondly, we can notice a black hole by the space distortion it creates. Thirdly, we can notice it by finding the amount of gas of nearby stars falling into the black hole
the black hole is a matter in outer space that is made by the force of gravity
Yes, a black hole could travel through space.
Black holes are basically highly compressed massive (has lots of mass) parts of space. The large amount of mass warps the space time around the black hole which causes intense gravity that suck everything in.
Obvisouly it is not a black hole! :)
Because its black and its a hole.......
Yes
no because it would destroy the space if it went in to a black hole
The black hole itself cannot be seen, however, its pulling effects of the surrounding area can be seen.
No non-fictional astronomical body know as black circle. If the question is meant to employ the term 'black hole' in space, what a black hole does is to exist.
Space doesn't, mass does.
Theoretically a rip in the fabric of space