Planets will never become black holes. They don't even have enough mass to undergo nuclear fusion, let alone form iron cores that are neccecary for supernova. in technicality here, if a planet like the earth were to be compressed down to the size of a tennisball, but retain all of its mass, it too would become a miniture black hole, but only for the time that the machinery that put it in this place were still active upon it. If left alone, a planet-massed black hole would instantaneously expand, losing its blackhole status.
This is nothing to do with planets. It's part of the theory of black holes. Perhaps you mean if the planet's mass were concentrated into a black hole. In that case the answer is Jupiter, because it has the greatest mass.
Black holes can destroy stars, so they'd have no trouble destroying a planet.
No. ther eis no black hole in our solar system. Black holes are a byproduct of the death of massive stars at least 10 times the mass of our sun. If there was a black hole between Mars and Jupiter all of the planets and even our Sun would revolve around the black hole. Since this is not the case there is no possible way a black hole could be within the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. There is however a large belt of asteroids between Mars and Jupiter.
False. Only the most massive stars will become black holes.
Yes. They get sucked into black holes all the time!
No, planets are not nearly massive enough to become black holes. Any object with more than about 80 times the mass of Jupiter would begin fusing hydrogen in its core, so it would be a star, not a planet. Even then, it would still not be massive enough to form a black hole.
The only thing that can end up a black hole is a star with about ten times more mass than our Sun. Planets are nowhere near that massive.
This is nothing to do with planets. It's part of the theory of black holes. Perhaps you mean if the planet's mass were concentrated into a black hole. In that case the answer is Jupiter, because it has the greatest mass.
no, the closest is billions of miles away.
Black holes can destroy stars, so they'd have no trouble destroying a planet.
They are called "black holes".
No. ther eis no black hole in our solar system. Black holes are a byproduct of the death of massive stars at least 10 times the mass of our sun. If there was a black hole between Mars and Jupiter all of the planets and even our Sun would revolve around the black hole. Since this is not the case there is no possible way a black hole could be within the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. There is however a large belt of asteroids between Mars and Jupiter.
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
inside space is planets galaxies moons and black holes
Yes.
Earth is a planet. Center's of galaxies sometimes contain black holes. Planets can't be black holes.
There is a force that unites the tides, planets and black holes. Tides are generally thought of as the rise and fall of the level of the oceans due to the gravitational effects of the moon and the sun. Planets have gravity proportional to their masses, and black holes are points of massive gravity. Gravity or its effects unite the three things listed.