"Black Hole Sun" is a 1994 song by Chris Cornell of Soundgarden; the writer has said he's not sure himself exactly what the lyrics mean. The term "black hole" is used by astrophysicists to refer to an object with a gravitational field so strong that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light. Our sun is actually too small to become a black hole; the minimum amount of mass required is somewhere between 150% and 300% of the sun's mass.
Uranus
There are no Black Holes in the Sun.
Our sun has, instead, sunspots which are «dark spots» in the photosphere. They are caused by the Sun intense magnetic field activity, with an periodicity of nearly 11 years.
These «dark spots» are not only darker in visual astronomical observation, but they are around 1,000ºC cooler than the surrounding solar «surface» - the above mentioned photosphere.
By the way, astronomers expect the Sun to invert its magnetic polarity next December, 2013, at the end of the present 11 years solar magnetic activity cycle.
Our sun is not massive enough to have a black hole in its center, or to form one when it eventually dies and collapses. You may be thinking of the current belief that all or virtually all galaxies have massive black holes at their centers. This seems to be the case for our Milky Way and for other galaxies that we can observe closely enough.
There is no "black hole in the Sun". A black hole is an object separate from the Sun. Or perhaps you mean sunspots - they look dark, but they are not really holes, simply regions which are quite a bit cooler than their surroundings.
It seems that the closest known black hole is at a distance of about 3000 light-years from us. Or from the Sun.
it means there is a solar eclipse
No
Firstly our sun is too small to become a black hole. Only stars that are a million to a billion times our sun do this, because they burn through their fuel quickly, unlike our sun. A typical black hole has 3 times the mass of our sun
Soundgarden.
It depends on how big the black hole is. If the black hole is small enough it will evaporate into nothingness before it could have any effect on the Sun. However if the black hole didn't evaporate, and if it fell into the Sun, the entire Sun would gradually fall into the black hole.
1994
No. There not a black hole on the sun or on Jupiter.
Black Hole Sun was created in 1994-05.
The sun's energy has not formed a black hole.
In theory, yes, a black hole could suck up the sun.
First of all, our sun can not become a black hole, it is too small for that. However if a star is three times bigger than our sun, then yes it will become a black hole.
Yes, The sun and the solar system orbit the center of the galaxy where there is a black hole.
A black hole can have anywhere between a few Sun masses, and several billion Sun masses (the so-called "supermassive black holes"). The diameter of the event horizon, if that's what you mean, is directly proportional to the black hole's mass - in other words, more massive black holes have a larger diameter.
No. The sun does not have enough mass to become a black hole. When the sun dies it will become a white dwarf.
No
I assume you mean "our galaxy". There is a supermassive black hole, with a mass that is about 4 million times the mass of our Sun, at the center of our galaxy.
Firstly our sun is too small to become a black hole. Only stars that are a million to a billion times our sun do this, because they burn through their fuel quickly, unlike our sun. A typical black hole has 3 times the mass of our sun
No. The sun does not have enough mass to form a black hole. A black hole does not lead to another galaxy. Anything pulled into a black hole becomes part of that black hole's mass. Even then, if Earth were to fall into a black hole the same mass as the sun it would be torn apart by tidal forces long before it crossed the event horizon.