the supermassive black hole in the center of the milky way will never hit earth. It is a small and quiet black hole, compared to the giants in some other galaxies. But none will destroy their galaxy.
We (our Solar System) are going around the center of the galaxy; we are in orbit around the galaxy. This is not much different from the Earth going in an orbit around the Sun. The black hole at the center doesn't change anything; it is just one object more that has some mass - an insignificant amount of mass, compared to the remainder of the galaxy.We (our Solar System) are going around the center of the galaxy; we are in orbit around the galaxy. This is not much different from the Earth going in an orbit around the Sun. The black hole at the center doesn't change anything; it is just one object more that has some mass - an insignificant amount of mass, compared to the remainder of the galaxy.We (our Solar System) are going around the center of the galaxy; we are in orbit around the galaxy. This is not much different from the Earth going in an orbit around the Sun. The black hole at the center doesn't change anything; it is just one object more that has some mass - an insignificant amount of mass, compared to the remainder of the galaxy.We (our Solar System) are going around the center of the galaxy; we are in orbit around the galaxy. This is not much different from the Earth going in an orbit around the Sun. The black hole at the center doesn't change anything; it is just one object more that has some mass - an insignificant amount of mass, compared to the remainder of the galaxy.
it is already on DVD
No.
I'm going there next week.
An "event horizon." This is the range from the black hole at which not even light can escape the pull of gravity. If the black hole is low-mass, this will be sharp, but the horizon of a supermassive black hole might have stars, worlds and people inside going on about their business. However, none of this could be known to anyone outside the horizon.
The Prime Meridian does not divide the Earth, it is an imaginary line going straight through the center.
It is clearly going to be geocentric done by : Hanna Flores ;5th grade
No. If going by the size of the event horizon, a diameter of 450,000 km would correspond to a black hole 76,200 times the mass of the sun, which would be considered an intermediate mass black hole, between stellar mass and supermassive. The supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy, at about 4 million times the mass of the sun has an event horizon about 23.6 million (23,600,000) kilometers across. Black holes up to 12 billion solar masses have been detected with event horizons up to 71 billion (71,000,000,000) kilometers across. More massive ones may exist.
The closest black holes yet discovered are several thousand light-years away. They are so far that they have no effect on Earth or its environment. A supermassive black hole appears to inhabit the center of the Milky Way galaxy, about 27,000 light-years away. Although it is several million times the mass of the Sun, its great distance insures that it won't affect our solar system.
Tycho is ALWAYS going to face the side of Earth because it was in the center of the universe. So this way that the Moon and the Sun revolve around Earth. Kay A.
No. There are no known black holes that would threaten Earth and the chances of one coming anywhere close even in the next few billion years are extraordinarily small.
As you go down, more mass will attract you from above, less mass from below.