Never. Please refrain from asking questions like this. Thanks
- Axxo
There is no black hole on the planet Jupiter, but there is a red spot.
No. No planet is massive enough to become a black hole. A black hole is the remains of a dead, supermassive star.
As the planet is approaching a black hole due to the immense gravitational pull on the objects surrounding it, the planet revolves around the black hole until it falls into the black hole.
A black hole is the stellar remains of a massive star.
There are no known planets in the vicinity of a black hole.
The mass of the black hole would increase in proportion to the mass of the planet
Yes, a black hole can move a planet. Black holes are so massive that they can alter the orbits of stars and star systems. This makes changing planetary motion nothing to a black hole.
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.
Yes, a planet could orbit a black hole, just like it could orbit a star. Gravity would bind them together. A planet orbiting 93 million miles from the sun feels exactly the same as if it were orbiting 93 million miles away from a black hole with the same mass as the sun has.
Black holes do not actively seek out planets to destroy. However, if a planet were to get too close to a black hole, the intense gravitational forces could disrupt or even pull the planet into the black hole. So, in that sense, a black hole has the potential to "kill" a planet by tearing it apart.
The black hole's mass would increase by an insignificant amount.
None that we know of.