No. Pluto is nowhere near massive enough to become a black hole.
Pluto has not become a black hole. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, while black holes are objects formed from the remnants of massive stars that have collapsed under their own gravity.
No black hole has "eaten" Pluto.
No, Pluto has not been sucked up by a black hole. Pluto is a dwarf planet located in our solar system, while black holes are distant cosmic phenomena with intense gravitational pull. Pluto orbits the Sun and is not at risk of being sucked up by a black hole.
About as far as Earth or the Sun is.
False. Nothing actually happened to Pluto itself. All that has happened is that, after discovering several new Pluto-like objects, scentists came up with a new definition for a planet that excluded Pluto.
It will get crushed and compressed into an infinitesimally small size.
No. The sun does not have enough mass to become a black hole. When the sun dies it will become a white dwarf.
No it is not.This myth is commonly believed but untrue.Pluto is a dwarf planet.
A more massive black hole.
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.
No. No planet is massive enough to become a black hole. A black hole is the remains of a dead, supermassive star.
The sun should not become a black hole. It does not have sufficient mass to undergo the necessary collapse.