Crossing the event horizon of a black hole would be absolutely possible if the hole was large enough not to have significant tidal force which tends to "spaghettify" any object approaching a smaller black hole. The more massive the black hole, the gentler the tidal force; for a smaller one, tidal force would stretch a person beyond hope of survival. Of course, this presumes the astronaut in question would have avoided the intense heat of any accretion disk, hazards of other infalling matter, intense radiation of relativistic-speed polar jets, etc.
Subjectively, it's been suggested that a person falling into a large black hole may not even be aware they've crossed the event horizon.
UNDEFINED. the gravity hold is overpowering in a blackhole.no one knows what it leads to.
You will be dead long before you even enter the singularity, so no you will not survive a blackhole encounter
Not likely at all, you could live a little bit longer if you were in a spaceship and you turned on the engine though, but no you cant survive.
Falling inside a black hole? Definitely not. Nothing would survive that, not even individual atoms would remain.
No, they would be totally crushed.
nothing can escape it not even light.
No.
I don't think you could talk about a "day" on a black hole - for a start, nobody could survive in a black hole, to observe such a day. But if you refer to the rotation, one black hole has been observed that seems to spin over a thousand times per second. This rotation, of course, can be different for other black holes.
No. Even your rocket would be crushed and torn apart by gravitational tides.
Theoretically, a black hole can destroy anything.
possibly
No. The black hole at the center of the galaxy is too far away to affect earth.
Due to the immense gravity of a black hole, no life we can currently fathom could survive in one.
there is no such thing as that
no because it would destroy the space if it went in to a black hole
Nothing
I don't think you could talk about a "day" on a black hole - for a start, nobody could survive in a black hole, to observe such a day. But if you refer to the rotation, one black hole has been observed that seems to spin over a thousand times per second. This rotation, of course, can be different for other black holes.
Basically none. No atom will survive the forces in a black hole. (However, all the mass that falls into the black hole will still be there.)
No. Even your rocket would be crushed and torn apart by gravitational tides.
if you stay in the event horizen then you will survive and end up in the future because time is slower in the event horizen
You would not; you wouldn't survive the tidal forces as you came near the black hole. Your atoms would fall into the event horizon, but your molecules would be destroyed before then.
No... Nor could he get out with holding his breath. It is physically impossible to escape from ablack hole, and likely just as impossible to survive the first moment one enters itsgravity.
Well, if you stay away from it yes you would but if you got too close you would be sucked in and you would die.
No. There is no such thing as a "white hole" in space. A black hole is a massive dent in space and time that has a massive gravitational pull. What is on the other side is really unknown, but the temperature is very hot, hotter than the sun in fact, so nothing could really survive to tell the story.