You would have a few more minutes or hours before being crushed into the singularity. However, there is no difference between the survival rates of different sizes: nobody lives through it.
An intermediate-mass black hole is one that has a mass somewhere between 100 and a million solar masses, i.e., larger than the stellar black holes, but smaller than the supermassive black holes. It seems likely that such holes should exist, but the observational evidence is not yet very firm.An intermediate black hole is one whose mass is somewhere between that of a stellar black hole (a few times the mass of the Sun), and that of a supermassive, or galactic, black hole (millions or billions of times the mass of the Sun).
An intermediate-mass black hole is one with a mass significantly greater than the typical stellar-mass black holes, but less than the supermassive black holes such as are found at galactic centers. Their identification remains difficult, and their origins remain in the realm of speculation, although a reasonable theory hints at the likelihood of their formation from accretion of dense stellar clusters... and one possibly is that they are primordial black holes left over from the creation of the universe.
Perhaps you mean stellar black hole. Stellar means related to a star, so that refers to a black hole that results from the collapse of a star. Actually that's the ONLY confirmed way to create a black hole (other ways are a bit hypothetical), but the term is also used to refer to a black hole which has approximately the mass of a star - to distinguish it from the supermassive galactic black holes in the center of most galaxies, as well as the intermediate-mass black holes found in star clusters.
There is no reason to believe that there are any black holes - stellar or otherwise - within our Solar System.
Probably stellar mass black holes
Tal Alexander has written: 'Stellar processes near the massive black hole in the galactic center' -- subject(s): Black holes (Astronomy)
Team galactic isn't in Pokemon black!
A quasi-stellar radio source (quasar) is a powerfully energetic and distant galaxy with an active galactic nucleus which most probably houses a supermassive black hole.Not quite. A quasar is believed to be a disk of superheated matter that is about to fall into a supermassive black hole.
An intermediate-mass black hole is one that has a mass somewhere between 100 and a million solar masses, i.e., larger than the stellar black holes, but smaller than the supermassive black holes. It seems likely that such holes should exist, but the observational evidence is not yet very firm.An intermediate black hole is one whose mass is somewhere between that of a stellar black hole (a few times the mass of the Sun), and that of a supermassive, or galactic, black hole (millions or billions of times the mass of the Sun).
An intermediate-mass black hole is one with a mass significantly greater than the typical stellar-mass black holes, but less than the supermassive black holes such as are found at galactic centers. Their identification remains difficult, and their origins remain in the realm of speculation, although a reasonable theory hints at the likelihood of their formation from accretion of dense stellar clusters... and one possibly is that they are primordial black holes left over from the creation of the universe.
Perhaps you mean stellar black hole. Stellar means related to a star, so that refers to a black hole that results from the collapse of a star. Actually that's the ONLY confirmed way to create a black hole (other ways are a bit hypothetical), but the term is also used to refer to a black hole which has approximately the mass of a star - to distinguish it from the supermassive galactic black holes in the center of most galaxies, as well as the intermediate-mass black holes found in star clusters.
stellar black holes, no none at allhawking black holes, no none at allsuper massive black holes at galactic centers, no none at alluniversal black holes, yes we are an example, if the entire universe is indeed inside an ultra massive black hole as would be suggested by the combination of big bang theory and black hole theory
There is no reason to believe that there are any black holes - stellar or otherwise - within our Solar System.
A black hole is the stellar remains of a massive star.
you have to beat the galactic warehouse, and when/if you beat it you then go into the galactic HQ by entering from the galactic warehouse, and then Looker will come open the door.
Probably stellar mass black holes
A black hole.