because they need to be in order to create a gravity source or the world will end but it will it will
-uk
A neutron star, or in an even more extreme case, a black hole.
The "sucking" is done by the gravity. A black hole has a large mass, concentrated in a small region of space.The "sucking" is done by the gravity. A black hole has a large mass, concentrated in a small region of space.The "sucking" is done by the gravity. A black hole has a large mass, concentrated in a small region of space.The "sucking" is done by the gravity. A black hole has a large mass, concentrated in a small region of space.
A black hole contains a large amount of matter, compressed in an incredibly small space.
The gravity in a black hole is so strong that not even light can escape. For all intents and purposes it can be considered infinite.
The gravity of an object depends on its mass, and on the distance to the object. In a black hole, the mass is concentrated in a very small space. That means that IF YOU GET VERY NEAR the black hole, the gravity will be enormous. But at any given distance, the gravity of a black hole will not be larger than the gravity of any other object of the same mass.Also, note that some black holes have a huge mass - in extreme cases, more than ten billion times the mass of the Sun. In that case, the huge gravity is due to the huge mass.
Yes, there's gravity in a black hole.. gravitational force is exerted wherever there is mass.
The gravity is enormous! The gravity in a black hole is high enough to stop light escaping.
A Black hole is a region in space where the pulling of gravity is so strong that even light cannot escape. This strong gravity occours because a very large amount of matter is compressed into a very tiny space. A black hole is formed due to uncontrolled contraction of heavy neutron stars under their own gravity.
Gravity is the only reason a black hole pulls things in. Nothing can escape a black hole, so gravity is its only way of affecting the outside world.
In terms of astronomical objects, most black holes are quite small. The event horizons of stellar mass black holes, the most common type, would range from about 10 to 100 miles in diameter, which works out to a volume of 500 to 500,000 cubic miles. Compacting such a large mass into a comparatively tiny volume is precisely why black holes have such strong gravity.
No. While the gravity of Jupiter is much stronger than Earth's it is nowhere near as strong as that of a black hole.
It is infinite