No one knows. May be god told man about these black holes no one knows for sure.
No non-fiction person has ever gone into a black hole.
No one has gone to a black 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.
the super massive black one in the centre of the milky way
The first strong black hole candidate to be generally accepted from observational evidence back in 1972 was the Cygnus X-1 x-ray binary.
The first black hole was probably after the first population III star exploded about 13.1 billion years ago. One of which might be the black hole at the centre of our galaxy.
You can't - that's the whole idea of a black hole. Don't get near a black hole in the first place.
No. The idea of a black hole was first proposed in 1783, 230 years ago. The first observations believed to indicate the presence of a black hole were in 1964.
No non-fiction person has ever gone into a black hole.
No one has gone to a black hole.
Nobody has ever visited a black hole. The nearest known black hole is many light years away. Much to far away for us to reach it.
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.
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.
Yes. Matter falls into black holes all the time; the first known black hole was the "Cygnus X1" black hole, which was discovered by the X-ray emissions caused by matter being pulled off the companion star and falling into the black hole.
karl
By a Star collapsing on its self.
The collapses star gets squeezed by collapses gas and turns into a black hole.