As you get near a black hole, the force of gravity is much stronger on the side of you nearest the black hole - so much so that your body (or anything else) is ripped into individual molecules.
That means that your body cannot travel through a black hole . . . a bunch of molecules is no longer a body.
well, we simply die.
As far as we know, the mass of the black-hole and it's energy would increase.
Blood would not travel through the body, nourishing and oxygenating the organs.
Travelling from Ohio to Illinois you would travel west and travel through Indiana.
If the sun's radiation could not travel through space, then the Earth would be a cold, dark, frozen rock, and nothing would have ever happened on it.
If the sun's radiation could not travel through space, then the Earth would be a cold, dark, frozen rock, and nothing would have ever happened on it.
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.
It sucks all matter within the event horizon. If one was created on Earth, the entire planet would be crushed to a singularity.
If you were close enough you would fall right in regardless of your speed as a wormhole (if such things exist) would behave practically the same as a blackhole (which have been shown to exist).
Vibrations travel through the material, just as they would in air. How well they travel through depends on the material.
It would be necessary to know at what speed you intend to travel through the outer core.
The lightning would travel through the meteor or through the plasma sheath around it. Some of the surface of the meteor may melt, though this will happen to a meteor anyway. Otherwise the meteor would be unaffected. The stress of atmospheric entry is much greater than any stress created by the lightning.