no.
you take them to the black hole
Yes, a robot could go into a black hole; pretty much any object you could name would be able to go into a black hole, although it would be unable to exit. It would not be a useful exercise to send a probe into a black hole for purposes of obtaining information since, even if it survived the extreme conditions near a black hole in order enter one, effects predicted by physics would prevent it from communicating from within - even light would not be able to escape past the event horizon from inside.
Decoding the Past Earth's Black Hole - 2007 TV was released on: USA: 18 March 2007
no, they are not gateways
black hole
I've never been able to figure it out by sound. There is a very easy way though. Follow the grain of the top as it goes into the sound hole. If you can see the on the edge of the sound hole then you have a solid top. If the edge of the hole is kin of dark the you don't If you paid less that$500.00 it is not a solid top. If you need help past this info mssg me @ GregPredmore.
If you enter a black hole, no matter what the speed, you will be sucked into the center of the black hole, and utterly destroyed.
they left a hole! the hole puts air into the mine and that's how they breathed but black smoke got into there lungs and that causes black lung coughing and i think that kills them
Let me clarify one thing... Basically, ALL galaxies, or almost all of them, have a giant black hole at their center. (If any galaxy does NOT have such a supermasive black hole, then it is likely that it had one in the past, and that it was ejected out of the galaxy.)
A black hole does not have a "bottom" in the traditional sense. Once an object is past the event horizon (the point of no return), it is inevitably pulled towards the singularity at the center of the black hole.
Well first of all there is more than one black hole in our galaxy. Second there would be no point of putting a probe in a black hole because: 1) no light can enter past the event horizon (you might want to look that up) therefore you can not see what is actually inside a black hole. 2) our closest known black hole is 150 light years away. So no there is no probe in any black hole. I hope this was some help to you.
The past tense for "you have a hole in your coat" would be "you had a hole in your coat."